Archives of “February 1, 2019” day
rssDon't let mistakes scare you, instead learn something
Be patient
Be patient. If a trade is missed, wait for a correction to occur before putting the trade on.
Be patient. Once a trade is put on, allow it time to develop and give it time to create the profits you expected.
Be patient. The old adage that “you never go broke taking a profit” is maybe the most worthless piece of advice ever given. Taking small profits is the surest way to ultimate loss I can think of, for small profits are never allowed to develop into enormous profits. The real money in trading is made from the one, two or three large trades that develop each year. You must develop the ability to patiently stay with winning trades to allow them to develop into that sort of trade.
Be patient. Once a trade is put on, give it time to work; give it time to insulate itself from random noise; give it time for others to see the merit of what you saw earlier than they.
Solar powered plane flew 24 hours straight
Opinions
Hope In Trading
10 Trading Skills-Must For Traders
Admitting that you are wrong the moment price action tells you that you are and getting out of a bad trade.
- Being patient and waiting for your entry signal and the patience to let a winning trade go as far aw it wants to before you exit.
- The discipline to trade the same regardless of how you feel at the moment.
- Following a trading plan instead of your ego.
- Trading in the direction of the trend in your time frame.
- The work ethic to do the homework on what works in trading before you put any money at risk.
- The passion to love the game enough to do what you have to do to break through to success.
- To accept your financial losses as tuition and the price of doing business not a blow to your abilities as a trader.
- Listen to those that are far more advanced as traders than you are.
The perseverance to keep trading until you are successful at it not when you just want to quit.
Thought from Peter Brandt
“The irony is that in real time, I never fully feel like I am trading successfully because I am always aiming for performance that is higher than I am attaining. I am generally my own worst critic and constantly set the bar higher than my last jump. The result is that it is difficult for me to crow about the “successes” of my trading career.
But, to the degree I have been consistently successful through the years, I believe it is due to three factors. First, I am obsessed with risk management. I spend more time and mental energy focusing on risk control protocols than on anything else. Managing losses and losing periods is my number one priority. If I can just tread water during the inevitable tough periods, sooner or later I will find myself caught in a favorable tide.
Second, my trading approach is overly simple by design. The result is that I know with as much certainty as is possible with a discretionary approach when there is a trade entry in my program. It does not mean that the trade will be profitable – only that the trade is there.
Third, I have tried to engage market speculation systematically, breaking down the process of trading into every conceivable component. What flows from this is an understanding of what components of trading are controllable and measurable and what components are uncontrollable. By the way, whether the next trade or series of trades will be profitable is not a controllable factor. Once a trader learns this — it is then possible to remove ego from the equation.” – Peter Brandt