Archives of “January 7, 2019” day
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Hesitation
You are watching a stock that has all the signals you look for in an opportunity. The proper point to enter comes, but you wait. You second guess the opportunity and don’t buy the stock. Or, you bid for the stock at a price that is not likely to get filled if the opportunity does pan out the way you anticipate it will. As a result, you get left behind while the market pushes the stock higher. A short while after the initial entry signal, when the stock has made a decent gain, you decide to finally enter the trade. After all, the market has proven your analysis correct, so you must be smart, and right! Not long after you enter, the stock turns south and you end up with a losing trade. If only you had bought when you first thought about it.
The Solution
This is really just a confidence issue. You are either not confident in your ability to analyze stocks, or you are not confident in the methodology that you are using to pick trades. Therefore, you have to research your method so that you have the confidence that it works. Then, you have to start small, making trades that have a potential loss that you are comfortable with. As you gain confidence in your method and your ability, increase the trade size. With your new found confidence, stand in a crowded room and scream, “I am great!” Well, maybe don’t carry it that far.
22 Rules For Day Trading
1.Time horizon is one year, not one day
2.Sangfroid wins. Equanimity is more important than anything else
3.Make your own decisions; listen to yourself
4.When you sell a long, consider a 180 and shorting it (and vice versa)
5.Don’t buy a stock right ahead of an earnings call
6.Your performance is better when you don’t listen to underperformers.
7.Listen to analysts only for potential stock ideas- and do my own work
8.Don’t agree and don’t argue (when you differ in opinion)
9.Be humbly confident when things go your way. Say “I got lucky this time”
10. Ego has no place here. Trade to make money, forget pride.
11. Act without full information, while doing efficient work
12. It’s OK to make mistakes.
13. Correct mistakes early- sell on missed earnings/changed thesis, and buy back something you’ve sold if things change.
14. Learn every day- build a new sheet – read filings- listen to calls
15. Don’t worry too much about what the crowd thinks
16. Don’t waste too much time on big Macro
17. “Sometimes you have to let the other guy make some money too”
18. Worrying is not doing
19. Don’t be a second-guesser or let them hover around you
20. Sometimes you have to suffer first before you win.
21. Just because the majority agrees on something doesn’t mean they’re right.
22. Focus on The Game
Bernard Baruch on Information Overload and Inside Information
Bernard Baruch on inside information: “The longer I operated in Wall Street, the more distrustful I became of tips and “inside” information of every kind. Given time, I believed that “inside” information can break the Bank of England or the United States Treasury”.
Baruch adds that most “inside information” is designed to mislead the gullible and that corporate insiders are just as likely to be led astray by their “infallible” informational advantage and belief in the company. His comments closely resemble Jesse Livermore’s sentiments on stock tips and insider information.
Trading on tips: Echoing Joseph Kennedy’s anecdote about the stock-tipping shoe shine boy of 1929, Baruch relates his own tale of taxi drivers, shoe shine boys, and beggars offering hot stock tips and market analysis.
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Discipline vs. Emotions in trading
Lifestyle & Improvement -Links
Lessons from Mister Rogers (GigaOm)
Footnotes to success (Stephen J. Cannell)
What is the path to success? (Market Folly)
Five mistakes everyone should make (CNN)
The simple joys of smaller living (Zen Habits)
Popular job interview questions (AOL)
The top 25 schools whose grads were top rated by recruiters (WSJ)
The most recession proof city in America (The Atlantic)
Absolutely true nirvana – an email inbox with nothing in it (AVC)
How to cope with email overload (Reuters)
The five best fax services (LifeHacker)
Five ways to waste your time, focus & life (The Positivity Blog)
How to improve your patience (The Positivity Blog)
Above articles Just I had read in last 2 days ….Yes u too can click these links and enjoy.
Your Job as a Trader
Life Wisdom
Art Huprich’s Market Truisms and Axioms
Raymond James’ P. Arthur Huprich published a terrific list of rules . Other than commandment #1, they are in no particular order:
• Commandment #1: “Thou Shall Not Trade Against the Trend.”
• Portfolios heavy with underperforming stocks rarely outperform the stock market!
• There is nothing new on Wall Street. There can’t be because speculation is as old as the hills. Whatever happens in the stock market today has happened before and will happen again, mostly due to human nature.
• Sell when you can, not when you have to.
• Bulls make money, bears make money, and “pigs” get slaughtered.
• We can’t control the stock market. The very best we can do is to try to understand what the stock market is trying to tell us.
• Understanding mass psychology is just as important as understanding fundamentals and economics.
• Learn to take losses quickly, don’t expect to be right all the time, and learn from your mistakes.
• Don’t think you can consistently buy at the bottom or sell at the top. This can rarely be consistently done.
• When trading, remain objective. Don’t have a preconceived idea or prejudice. Said another way, “the great names in Trading all have the same trait: An ability to shift on a dime when the shifting time comes.” (more…)