Case Study - Oliver Velez
Oliver Velez remembers how he felt as a child
when he placed second or third in a race, or
when his team lost a baseball game. "I felt a
great degree of shame at not winning. And I'm
still very aware of always wanting to win. But I
think that as an adult, I've used that pride and
competitive instinct in a positive way."
At age 33, Velez is the president of Pristine
Capital Management (http://www.pristine.com),
one of the world's top resources for analysis of
financial markets. Pristine has over 10,000
subscribers in 48 countries worldwide and has
been rated the industry's number one resource
for active stock market players by Money as well
as Barron's. Velez gives seminars all over the
world that focus on teaching people how to play
the market intelligently—he's the world's
largest seminar giver in the area of active
stock market play.
In addition, Velez has a wife and two small
children he calls "the best investment I ever
made, with the sweetest dividends." And he's a
car collector, author, and movie buff—marks of a
man who has earned some money and time to spend
as he chooses.
Velez's successes with his company and in his
life in general have come about because of a few
key strengths. He's seized his opportunities
without undue fear, learned to use the tools of
the investment business, and spotted vital
trends in his industry. Plus, he's kept the
competitive spirit and desire to win that he
found in his youth, and they've served him well.
Seizing Opportunities
Velez had spent three years at Hunter College
in New York—and made a few market trades on his
own—when he came across a chance he couldn't
refuse. A large entertainment firm offered him a
full-time accounting position with some market
responsibilities. He decided to accept the
offer, then continued to play the markets as an
individual as well as fulfilling his job
responsibilities for a few more years.
That led to another opportunity he calls "a
life-changing experience." He was assigned to
co-manage a $40 million hedge fund for his New
York firm. For the next two and a half years, he
performed exceptionally well, sometimes making
more money for his firm in one day than he
earned per year in salary. Soon, he says, "the
light bulb went on: This was something I could
do for myself."
There was one problem with the idea of
trading on his own—a lack of money. But with his
impressive on-the-job success, Velez easily
overcame the obstacle. A few friends invested in
him, and he soon had a mini-fund to trade. For
six years now, he's been trading professionally.
From that experience grew the services he offers
through Pristine today.
Using the Right Tools: "We Fell in Love With
MetaStock
During his early years doing accounting and
investment work for the entertainment business,
Velez met his current business partner, Greg
Capra. "We had just started looking at technical
approaches to the markets when, one day, Greg
excitedly invited me to his house," Velez
remembers. "He had a computer program to show
me, one he'd seen at Dr. Alexander Elder's
weekly investment group.
The program was MetaStock®, a charting and
analysis program for all types of securities
from the Salt Lake City software firm Equis
International Even in the early version they
were looking at ten years ago, MetaStock allowed
Capra and Velez to look at visual
representations of price data with surprising
ease and clarity, and to quickly analyze them
with mathematical indicators and other tools.
From that moment," Velez says, "We fell in
love with the product. We've used MetaStock for
virtually every single form of analysis we've
done to this very day. We come up with all of
our services, all of our stock picks using
MetaStock.
Velez regularly uses The Explorer, a
MetaStock tool designed to filter, sort, and
rank securities from a database, to help him
pick winners. "I program The Explorer with my
own specific criteria," he says. "It takes a
large universe of securities, which would be
impossible to follow manually, and narrows it
down to a controllable number. At that point I
can construct a template using MetaStock's
invaluable bank of built-in line studies and
indicators, then apply that template to each
chart as I look at it individually. This is very
easy to do in MetaStock and very important to us
at Pristine. I'm definitely big on keeping the
feel I have for the markets and applying my
individual knowledge to decide exactly when to
buy and sell.
Can other programs do what MetaStock does for
Velez? Yes, but according to him, they're
"cumbersome and slow." Velez also says he thinks
he'd be hard-pressed to find another company
like Equis, the makers of MetaStock. He often
recounts his first experience with the company's
customer support department—"so I remember it
very clearly," he laughs. "About eight years
ago, I had my first copy of MetaStock and wanted
to set up an exploration in The Explorer, but I
really wasn't comfortable with the formula
language and had some other problems. I called
the support department late on a Friday
afternoon and found an individual so bent on
solving my problem that it became his problem.
We were on the phone 45 minutes to an hour past
Equis' closing time. This representative then
assured me that if we couldn't get my
exploration going within the next fifteen
minutes, he would come in on Saturday morning to
get it done. It was the most amazing thing!"
From that point on, Velez says, he was
completely sold on the program and the company
that makes it.
In addition, he says, he's found MetaStock
meeting his needs ever since he was a beginning
investor. "Someone on the beginning level of
technical analysis can find tremendous value in
MetaStock, as can the professional who is very
well versed in technical analysis. It's a
program that, even today, I'm still growing
into. I find myself learning more and more with
it each year.
Asked about the goals he's attained in his
trading career, Velez says, "My skills for
approaching the markets from a technical
perspective are almost entirely due to my use
and mastery of MetaStock. In a sense, my life's
dream has come about with MetaStock as a key
component," he says.
An Infant Revolution: Velez on Making Money
in Today's Markets
Velez says we've started a revolution with
electronic trading, but it's really still in its
infancy. "Several things that will mean big
changes for the way we do business are very
close to occurring," he says. "24-hour trading
will be upon us in the next couple of months.
Also, I think programs like MetaStock, along
with data services and electronic brokerages,
could become as commonplace on computers as
browsers and Internet access services are today.
I can imagine them being pre-installed. Charting
programs will have the ability to place trades
directly. And I think we may be moving toward
one worldwide exchange sometime in the future.
In this industry, the entire markets are
moving into the new millennium. There's
mind-boggling growth going on right now, driven
by technology. And it's just begun. We're
growing rapidly technologically but staying the
same emotionally and psychologically. That
creates opportunity for the trader or investor.
How can someone take advantage of that kind
of opportunity? Velez readily shares his advice
in four parts—education, pacing, competition,
and starting small.
Find a mentor if possible," he says. "Develop
a trading and investment plan and approach the
markets with that. It will help you remove the
more emotional side of trading." That's one
thing Velez appreciates about technical
analysis: It helps traders avoid the
fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants approach. "It's
amazing to me that people still trade that way,
without technical analysis," he observes. Still,
he finds a hybrid of technical and fundamental
analysis to be a very valid approach. "Applying
technical analysis to fundamentally sound
companies is a great way to go," he notes.
Second, Velez advises, beginners should take
it slow and be patient. "We learn to trade the
way a child learns to walk," he says. "It's
trial and error. Education can cut down on the
‘tuition' you pay, but you still have to make
some mistakes in order to learn." New investors
shouldn't become frustrated and leave the
markets simply because of those mistakes. If
they learn well from their errors, they can do
better in their ensuing transactions.
The next piece of advice from Velez: Never
underestimate the markets or your competition in
them. "This is one of the most difficult
endeavors on the planet," he cautions beginners,
"because it's an emotional and psychological
game. We do not play stocks; we play people. It
takes human response to make the markets move,
and that's what makes the game difficult. Every
time you place a transaction, you have to
remember that someone else is on the other side
of that transaction betting in the opposite
direction. Who is that? And maybe most
importantly, is he or she smarter than you are?"
He finds it deceiving to think about buying or
selling stocks from some nebulous
institution—the controlling elements in the
markets are the human factors of greed and fear,
and the key to making money is determining which
is in control.
Finally, Velez offers a tidbit of wisdom from
his own experience. "Do not be afraid to trade
small—ridiculously small," he says. "I remember
feeling pressured and embarrassed that I
couldn't play 100 shares or more. This should
not be the case." He encourages people to play
ten or even five shares at a time to get the
feel of the markets and gain proficiency. This
approach is better than paper trading, he says,
because "paper trading removes the psychological
response. You need something real on the line to
test how you respond in real scenarios.
Playing the Game
Velez is with the markets virtually every
minute. In the morning, before the markets open,
he's reading voraciously in the online versions
of major U.S. newspapers. He also recommends
staying abreast of changes on a minute-by-minute
bases using sites like briefing.com or free
Internet resources like CNBC, CNNFN, or CBS
Market Watch. And at his own site,
pristine.com, Velez offers a real-time
investment chat room where sophisticated traders
can find minute by minute guidance and market
updates.
In the evenings, he's at the computer, making
plans for the next day's trading. His
five-year-old daughter watches at his side. To
her, it looks just like a video game. And in
some ways, it is a game—a challenging,
high-stakes match of wit and skill, the perfect
pursuit for an enthusiastic, competitive soul
like Velez. |