Samba has his rifle cocked and
pointed at Veeru’s head under instructions that he should shoot the moment
Basanti stops dancing. Basanti dances until she can dance no more. Then a shot
rings out. The camera zooms out and instead of a dead Veeru we see Samba slowly
tumbling down from his perch. Jai has shot Samba and saved the day as he covers
Veeru and Basanti while they escape Gabbars den.
We all know happens next. The
ensuing chase sees the three cross a wooden bridge which is the only way to get
across to the village and try and prevent the dacoits from crossing over to
their side. Jai asks Veeru to take Basanti back to the village and bring back
reinforcements and ammunition as he tries to single-handedly hold off the
dacoits. Outgunned and out ammoed or if you prefer- outbulleted, Jai knows that
his only chance to prevent the dacoits from reaching his side is to destroy the
bridge.
As luck would have it, there is a
stick of unexploded dynamite on the bridge. The dacoits, knowing that Jai is
running out of bullets, start walking on the bridge towards Jai, all the while
shooting at the rock behind which he is hiding. Seeing that he has only 3
bullets left, Jai suddenly comes out from behind the rock and walks
deliberately towards the dynamite stick even as the dacoits start shooting at
him. Ignoring the bullets hitting him and focusing only on the task at hand,
Jai valiantly takes 3 shots at the dynamite and succeeds in blowing the bridge
and most of the dacoits with the 3rd shot. This was one of my
favourite action sequences in that epic film.
In case you are wondering what
this piece has to do with trading, allow me to blow your mind! Jai embodies the
quintessential gambler and the dacoits the casino or the trader. Jai knows that
he is outgunned and outbulleted...(I know there is no word like
outbulleted...but I like it nevertheless) i.e. he does not hold the edge. He
knows that when he does not have the edge then even the best risk management
i.e. using the bullets sparingly will only delay the inevitable. The odds being
against him, all that risk management can ensure is that he delays the end. The
law of large numbers will ensure that the edge that the dacoits hold against
him will prevail if the game is played long enough. The only chance he has of
winning against the dacoits is to go ALL IN or take large risks and hope that
lady luck favours him. That is what happened when one of the 3 bullets he had
left in his gun hits the dynamite.
On the flip side the job of the
trader is to be in the position of the dacoits. Like the dacoits whose edge was
their larger numbers and the large supply of ammunition, the trader has to
develop or discover (I prefer the word discover to copy) a system which gives
him a small edge over the market. An edge that when used often enough will ensure
that the trader wins. Once he has the edge, the only thing that he has to do is
ensure that his capital is preserved through efficient risk management so that
he can play the game over a long enough term for the law of large numbers to
work its magic in his favour.
For this to happen, the trader
has to be wary of not just the normal bullets coming his way but also of that
lucky shot that blew the dynamite and also blew out the dacoits. His risk
management in other words should ensure that there are no unexploded sticks of
dynamite left lying around to take a hit from some lucky bullet. It should also
be robust enough to handle not just the expected (that the dacoits will succeed
in shooting Jai) but also the unexpected (that Jai will shoot not at them but at
the dynamite).
So this brings me to the end of
another lesson from Sholay. What a great movie! It has something in it for
everybody including traders! This is also my answer to everyone who equates
trading to gambling. The gambler knows or at least should know that he does not
have an edge and all he can hope for is luck to favour him. A trader, on the
other hand, believes he has an edge and depends on his risk management system
to pull him through over the long term. Having thus paid my tribute to Sholay,
I can let you know that I am currently long in the Nifty and will cut my long
position and go short below 5170.
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