Archives of “January 12, 2019” day
rssThis is Best To Explain Chinese Market
If you are working to change the world, invite others to join. —Thomas Edison & Henry Ford —Steve Jobs & Bill Gates
Top Ten Reasons Not to Trade– and Why You Should Do It Anyway
#1 Trading creates no greater good
– like when you buy grain futures, the price skyrockets, and you make a killing! A poor farmer plants more seeds as a consequence, third world children get affordable bread, hmm, did I say you make a living?
#2 Trading makes you selfish
– and that’s why filthy rich old speculators turn to philanthropy.
#3 Staring at screens all day is not healthy
– which is true, and why slow lunch hours are perfect for physical exercise.
#4 Staring at screens all day is not good for your social skills
– which is why traders are out having fun when the market is closed. (Don’t “normal” people spend evenings in front of the TV?)
#5 The market is a casino
– where scrupulous gamblers make it easier (and more important) for sane traders to make a living. (more…)
If the titanic sunk in 2017
Two cardnial sins
Kerala is the first state to have 100% Literacy. They are now going to beyond their target
DOUG HIRSCHHORN’S 8 WAYS TO GREAT
I just completed reading a book 8 WAYS TO GREAT. It is short (114 pages) but packed with great insight on what makes great people great. I read it in a few hours and as is the case in all the books I read I highlight major points and make margin notes about what strikes me as important enough to share with others. What follows are the eight principles or “ways to great” and the quotes I found worth passing along.
First Principle: Find Your “Why?”
“The reason most people go through life with big dreams but fail to achieve them is because they ask themselves “how” before they know their “why”(9).
Second Principle: Get To Know Yourself
“The perfect trader-if such a person exists-is methodical and careful about making decisions, extremely disciplined, resilient to setbacks, with a high degree of internal confidence. He holds strong opinions but is also able to admit quickly when he is wrong, not take it personally, and view it as a learning opportunity rather than a failure. He understands the value of leaving his ego at the door. He’s willing and able to trust his gut and place big bets when the opportunity presents itself. In fact, that pretty well describes the ideal blend of characteristics of any successful person, no matter what he is doing professionally or personally” (18-19).
Third Principle: Learn To Love The Process
“The best traders don’t think about how many millions they need to make each year. They focus on making the best trading decision they can with each trade they make. And if there isn’t a good trading opportunity right now, they have the discipline to do nothing and just wait. Concentrating on one trade at a time is their process” (38).
Fourth Principle: Sharpen Your Edge
“Gaining a competitive advantage is like having a two-edged sword, and you need to keep both of them sharp. On edge is internal-knowing what unique skills you bring to the table. The other is external and comes from gathering knowledge that makes it more likely you’ll succeed” (45).
Fifth Principle: Be All That You Can Be
“The takeaway lesson for everyone wanting to optimize their own performance without regard for what others are doing is fourfold: 1) know your edge; 2) act only when you have the edge; 3) avoid taking the outcome personally because it involves factors that are beyond your control; 4) measure your success in terms of how well you performed and not only the outcome” (70).
Sixth Principle: Keep Your Cool
“Deciding when to cut your losses is one of the toughest decisions for anyone to make, but traders at the top of their game know that they always have to make the decisions they need to make, which may or may not be the ones they want to make” (77).
Seventh Principle: Get Comfortable With Being Uncomfortable
“In the trading world, you will either make money or lose money on any given trade. All that matters in the end is making more money when you’re right than you lose when you’re wrong. Knowing this, traders have learned to accept failure as part of the game, but they also use the information they acquire from their mistakes as a learning tool. Frequently, what they learn from losing money is more valuable than what they learn when they make money” (90).
Eighth Principle: Make Yourself Accountable
“Commitment, perseverance, and discipline are the characteristics that move people beyond desire to action, that differentiate mediocrity from greatness, and that separate greatness from superstardom” (95).
And to sum up: “True success begins with a state of mind. But it takes specific actions and behaviors to move from intentions into action and get results” (2)
95% of Unsuccessful Traders -Have This Type of Routine
Our Mantra :Avoid Blue channels ,Fundamentals ,Results ,Growth ,Economy………Everything is Manipulated
Just Look at Chart ,Make Strategy ,Have Target and Mint Money.
The harder I try, the more money I lose. What’s going on?
A: This is a fairly common phenomenon which is why we have to learn how to adapt to market conditions and be patient with our strategies. Just because you “try harder” doesn’t mean that your profits will expand equally in relation to your effort. While effort helps create and sustain an edge, at the end of the day you still need the market to cooperate with whatever you are doing.
The best analogy I can provide here is one that many golfers are familiar with. If you’ve ever golfed in high winds, you know that your score will often be higher. Some of this, obviously is due directly to the windy conditions (which you have no control over). However, studies show that the most significant reason why golfers perform poorly in windy conditions has less to do with the conditions but more about how they react to those conditions. For example, many golfers will tend to swing harder in high winds which causes them to lose both their swing tempo and balance and they make more mental mistakes because the wind distracts them. The same is true for traders whose strategies are not flowing with the market. Without realizing it, traders will modify their own approaches (often by trying harder by making trades that don’t fit their strategy) which tends to hurt performance more than it helps.
Bottom line – keep close tabs on yourself and how you’re “adjusting” to market conditions. Being aware of how the market environment is affecting you and your changes to it is an important skill every trader must possess.