Archives of “January 9, 2019” day
rssOne Men Power ,Germany 1934-India 2015
Wall of losses
If you’re in the market, one of biggest obstacles you’ll face is the wall of losses. It’s fairly difficult to deal with the markets if you are not willing to lose. It’s almost impossible. It’s like wanting to be alive, but only wanting to breathe in and not breathe out.
When you want to be right, you’re not dealing with the obstacles. Instead, you’re forcing things. When you want to make a profit out of today’s trade, even though it’s a big loser, then you’re not dealing with today’s obstacle. Enjoy the obstacle, embrace it, and be willing to accept it. If the market tells you it’s time to get out at a loss, then do so.
Key Ingredients to Performing Your Best
1. Passion. You must be passionate about what you re doing and having fun. Passion first, then performance.
2. Confidence. Top performance comes from having a high degree of confidence. You must have the confidence that you can take control and face adversity. You must also be confident that you will have a favorable outcome over time.
3. Concentration. Peak performance comes from exceptional CONCENTRATION. You must concentrate on the process, though, not the outcome A sprinter who is in the lead is thinking about the wind on their face, how relaxed their arms are, feeling the perfect stride…they are totally in the moment. The person who does NOT have the edge is thinking, “Oh, that runner is pulling ahead of me…I don’t know if I have enough wind to catch the leader…” They are tense and tight because they are thinking about the outcome, not the
process.
4. Resiliency. Great performances come from being able to rebound quickly and forget about mistakes.
5. Challenge. Great performance comes from pushing yourself and trying to overcome limitations. Staying in the safe zone becomes a monkey on your back. Challenge yourself to take that hard trade. Manage it. If it does not work out, so what…your risk was limited and you can pat yourself on the back for taking the hard trade in the first place.
6. See and DO … don’t think! Great performance comes from turning off the brain
and becoming automatic. This is being in the Zone …in the groove. You can’t overanalyze the markets during the trading day.
7. Relaxation. When you are relaxed, your reflexes and timing are superior because
you are loose.
How I Look At The Markets
The markets are a science. Plain and simple. Some like to look at fundamentals and guess what will happen next. I like to look at the numbers. The facts. The only thing you can trust. Billion dollar hedge fund manager David Harding views the markets similarly:
Our approach to markets is a science. It is an unpublished science, but it is a real one. You would have thick leather-bound volumes of papers on it if there were a willingness to “open the kimono,” as the horrible modern expression has it. The process of trading our system is like repeatedly drawing different colored balls from the statistician’s apocryphal bag. As we draw out a ball it becomes part of the track record, and we put it back in the bag, but there is no guarantee that the balls will come out in the same order in the future.
Trend following is speculation in its purest form–find an edge and exploit it consistently over time. That attitude is critical for any entrepreneurial success. Throw the lottery mentality away. Forget the one hit wonder luck the press propagates to the masses of lemmings
Who owns Greece debt? 60% by Eurozone
Filter process I find myself using more often, especially around new ideas and concepts
Some Rules for Living Applied to Trading
I ran across these rules for living, and thought they apply beautifully to the process of trading successfully. They are as follows:
- Show up.
- Pay attention.
- Live your truth.
- Do your best.
- Don’t be attached to the outcome.
Show up. Woody Allen has said 90% of the story is showing up. And I think that can be true for trading. Showing up means being prepared and ready before the market opens. It means getting your entry and exit orders in the market in a timely fashion. You’ve done your research, and you’re clear about your intentions.
Pay attention. Watch the price action. Be cognizant of what your chosen indicators are saying. Know what news is breaking, and watch the market’s reaction to the news. Be alert to twists and turns in market direction. Don’t wander off mentally or physically.
Live your truth. Your truth could be fundamental or technical or a combination of the two. But if you don’t trade in accordance with your guidelines, you can get yourself on the wrong side of the situation and yourself. Be who you say you are as a trader. Are you honest, perceptive, courageous, steady, and disciplined? Are you trading in the manner you have chosen or committed to trade.
Do your best. Honestly, all you can do is your best. But your best can get better as you practice and learn. Learn from your mistakes, and forgive yourself past digressions. Each day is a new day, and each day brings new opportunities. It’s your job to capture what you can of the opportunities even as you rigorously protect your capital.
Don’t be attached to the outcome. This is the hard part, and this is the essential part. The results of any given trade or trading day are really not indicative of whether or not you will be profitable. One trade or day is simply not the measure of success, and is really irrelevant. If you’re showing up, and paying attention, and living your viable truth, and doing your best, you can accept whatever outcome develops. Of course, if the outcome is disastrous over time, you need to go back to the drawing board and develop better methods.