Archives of “February 11, 2019” day
rssTen Bad Habits of Unprofitable Traders
1. They trade too much.
2. Unprofitable traders tend to be trend fighters, always wanting to try to call tops and bottoms.
3. Taking small profits quickly and letting losing trades run in the hopes of a bounce back, is a sure path to failure.
4. Wanting to be right more than wanting to make money will be a very expensive lesson.
5. The biggest key to profitability is to avoid big losses. (sizing / risk vs reward)
6. Unprofitable traders watch (Blue Channels ) for trading ideas.
7. Unprofitable traders want stock picks, while profitable traders want to develop trading plans and systems.
8. Unprofitable traders think trading is about being right.
9. Unprofitable traders don’t do their homework because they think there is a quick and easy route to trading success.
10. Unprofitable traders #1 question is how much they can make if they are right, while the profitable traders #1 concern is how much they can lose if wrong.
FANGMAN now has a combined market cap of $4tn.
The group of tech stocks (FB, AMZN, NFLX, GOOGL, MSFT, AAPL, and NVDA) is up 23% on average this year and 69% over the last 12 months.
Don't be afraid to be a sheep
- Follow the trends. This is probably some of the hardest advice for a trader to follow because the personality of the typical futures trader is not “one of the crowd.” Futures traders (and futures brokers) are highly individualistic; the markets seem to attract those who are. Very simply, it takes a special kind of person, not “one of the crowd,” to earn enough risk capital to get involved in the futures markets. So the typical trader and the typical broker must guard against their natural instincts to be highly individualistic, to buck the trend.
- Know why you are trading the commodity markets. To relieve boredom? To hit it big? When you can honestly answer this question, you may be on your way to successful futures trading.
- Use a trading system, any system, and stick to it.
- Apply money management techniques to your trading.
- Do not overtrade.
- Take a position only when you know where your profit goal is and where you are going to get out if the market goes against you.
- Trade with the trends, rather than trying to pick tops and bottoms.
- Don’t trade many markets with little capital.
- Don’t just trade the volatile contracts.
- Calculate the risk/reward ratio before putting a trade on, then guard against holding it too long.
- Establish your trading plans before the market opening to eliminate emotional reactions. Decide on entry points, exit points, and objectives. Subject your decisions to only minor changes during the session. Profits are for those who act, not react. Don’t change during the session unless you have a very good reason.
- Follow your plan. Once a position is established and stops are selected, do not get out unless the stop is reached or the fundamental reason for taking the position changes.
- Use technical signals (charts) to maintain discipline – the vast majority of traders are not emotionally equipped to stay disciplined without some technical tools.
A trader's mind
Two Kinds Of Traders
News events in particular cause traders to make incorrect decisions, because they play on emotions. The urge to follow the crowd is normal. It is comforting. And in a strong bull market, it may just be correct.
But in most circumstances, letting emotions push you into making trading decisions costs traders money.
There are two kinds of traders.
1. Those who make emotional decisions based on any of the above.
2. Those who make money off of those who make emotional decisions.
India: The Bubble Popped
Nifty aggregate earnings (added up) are now DOWN 2.25% from the June quarter last year. This, combined with the Nifty just 5% from all-time highs is, one might think, a little effervescent. In more understandable English terms: We are in a bubble.
The understanding that this is not really driven by earnings is necessary to know when the stop loss hits and the urge is to wait because of the glorious India story.
How America uses its land
2 Keys For Traders
Do the hardest work first. The greatest performers in any field delay instant gratification in pursuit of their ultimate goal, which is to be the best they can be while pushing through less than comfortable situations. For me, the hardest work is determining a loss target. I firmly believe that the very best traders determine where a loss is to be taken before determining where money can be made. It is difficult to consider how much you are willing to lose before you consider the instant gratification of adding to your bank account. But it has to be so. Accept a loss and delay the gratification of instant money for the reward of a lifetime of income.
Practice intensely. “Ninety minutes appears to be the maximum amount of time that we can bring the highest level of focus to any given activity.” It is very important that athletes and musicians in particular practice and practice intently every day but there are limits and the need for adequate rest. How does this relate to traders? For me I trade off bigger charts, such as the daily and weekly, along with one intra-day chart and by so doing I allow myself plenty of time to do other things, such as write this blog. For others, such as day traders, it is just as important that time is spent outside the charts, refreshing the batteries. In fact, I am sure most of you would agree that when we walk away from the charts for a while we tend to see them with better clarity when we return. Trade intently but take a rest. The market will be here when you get back. I promise.