Archives of “January 10, 2019” day
rssMARK DOUGLAS -On 5% Successful Traders
There is a reason why so few traders succeed. It is not for lack of study or effort or passion. It is not for lack of education or a Bloomberg platform subscription. It is not because only a select few have access to technical “secrets” (a.k.a. indicators). No. So few succeed at trading for the same reason that so few succeed at living an abundant life.
The unsuccessful refuse to think differently when faced with difficulties believing that luck has passed them by. They do not succeed because the want of instant gratification and its fleeting rewards has replaced the need for sustainable, hard fought, earned rewards indicative of a mindset prepared to tackle failure as nothing but a mathematical equation: here is the problem now let’s find the solution.
The mediocre search for easy answers to difficult problems believing that the right answers to their questions are found somewhere “out there”. The successful make difficult decisions where there are no easy answers, questioning whether their perception of what is out there is a distorted reflection of what is inside of them.
The best traders, according to Mark Douglas, think differently than others because they know that what is most important is “how they think about what they do and how they’re thinking when they do it.”
Highly recommend reading these 2 books: 1) The Big Short (M. Lewis). 2) The Greatest Trade Ever (G. Zuckerman).
THE GOLDEN RULE
10% of your trades will account for 90% of your profits
1 or 2 months will account for most of your annual profits
1 or 2 days will account for most of your monthly profits
Good investors and traders know that very well. They are ready to press extra hard when realize that they might have a home run in play. They are ready to disappear in 60 seconds when things don’t go as planned.
William Bernstein: There Are Two Kinds Of Investors
There are two kinds of investors, be they large or small: those who don’t know where the market is headed, and those who don’t know that they don’t know. Then again, there is a third type of investor – the investment professional, who indeed knows that he or she doesn’t know, but whose livelihood depends upon appearing to know.”
William Bernstein
Trading Slogans
Statistic makes the money.
I just control the risk.
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I control my risk.
The market controls my win.
I just go with the market.
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THINK – Control your risk !!!
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MAKE MONEY
1. Setups
2. Statistic
3. Risk managment
4. Disciplin
5. Setup Training
6. Learn Rulebook, every day
WORK HARD !!! DAY for DAY !!!
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LAZY TRADERS LOSE !!!
THEY JUST LOSE !!!
I HATE LAZY PEOPLE !!!
I AM A WORKAHOLIC AND I LOVE IT !!!
BECAUSE ITS ME WHO MAKES MILLIONS, EASY !!!
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SETUP TRAINING,
makes my money !!!
Do it every day !!!
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Psychology by Michael Jordan
Hi,
I like these commercials, because it very similar with trading. Commercials are not new, but i hope, that it can somebody give some more motivation.
1st one: YouTube – Michael Jordan “Simple Math” Nike Commercial
It says – stop looking for holy grail, there is no math formula, there is only training!
2nd one: YouTube – Maybe – New Michael Jordan Commercial
It says – stop looking for excuses!
3rd one: YouTube – Michael Jordan “Failure” Nike Commercial
It says – Success it not about winning, it is about loosing and deal with it!
4th one: YouTube – Look Me In The Eyes – Jordan Commercial – Become Legendary
It says – very nice courage and patience… I am scared what i wont become, you are scared what you could become..
5th one: YouTube – Michael Jordan “Become Legendary #1” Nike Commercial
It says – It is not about indicator/shoes/etc!!
Good luck, goal is closer, than you think..
Inexorable Change
Since change is ubiquitous and permanent, we might as well become experts at adapting. We can get comfortable with change and look forward to its permutations and surprises. We can train ourselves to become adept at learning, unlearning, and relearning.
On the other hand, we don’t want to be whipsawed back and forth through too rapid repositioning. Nor do we want to keep switching methods and systems. We need to find the balance between being steady and too speedy a responder. We need to comprehend that markets, like the ocean, have waves, tides, and tsunamis. Each needs to be handled differently.
We want to make change an acceptable reality rather than a soap opera. We need to be flexible and versatile. In being flexible we observe reality clearly and adjust our actions. In being versatile we utilize our trained ability to perceive and react effectively.
Volatility in markets can be embraced as opportunity or feared as danger. That shot of adrenaline you feel as you trade can be exciting or terrifying depending on how you view the situation. Interpretation is at the essential core of our trading.
A good way to start each trading day is by asking some questions: Where are the opportunities today? Are there any impending risks to my positions? Where might the opportunities or risks develop?
In the midst of unfolding turmoil or stagnant stalling, we need to distinguish between the fundamental and technical changes that are structural and therefore important and possibly extensive, and those that are merely headlines passing through and therefore only interesting and probably short lived.
In any event, accept whatever is happening, utilize your methods and guidelines, take a deep breath, and do your best. Remember, as it has been said, “All you can do is all you can do, and all you can do is enough.”
Are you gambling or trading?
No yelling
Be very aware of your own emotions. Irrational behavior is every trader’s downfall. If you are yelling at your computer screen, imploring your stocks to move in your direction, you have to ask yourself, “Is this rational?” Ease in. Ease out. Keep your stops. No yelling.