Archives of “February 2019” month
rssDiscipline -Must For Every Trader ,Yes 95% Traders …Don't Think About it !
Find peace in the market
The market has to be your sanctuary, the thing you love, and you can’t be afraid of making mistakes. Yes, you’ll experience both good and bad times, but you must enjoy and revel in the challenge.
Your perspective on life will never be the same again (Watch Video )
Every day same thing over and over, it never ends. It's like Groundhog Day every day.Yes 95% will lose Money
Whether Bush does something or nothing, there will be a catastrophe, and he won't be reelected." Jim Rogers, 1989
I think position sizing needs to match your personality.There is no "right" formula.
A Bad Teacher
The World’s Worst Teacher The market often rewards bad behavior. You exit a stock because your stop is hit. You are okay with this because you followed your plan. The market then immediately reverses. You begin to think, “If only I stayed with the position.” The next time the market goes against you, you decide you are not going to get tricked again. This time though, the market does not reverse and what started out as a small manageable loss is now huge. The market will give you loss after loss forcing you to abandon a methodology right before it takes off without you. On the flip side, the market will lull you into a false sense of confidence. You trade larger and larger, taking on excessive risk. You print money until your risks become so excessive that one or two bad trades wipe you out. Learn from the market, but realize that sometimes it can be a lousy instructor. |
Four Common Emotion Pitfalls Traders’ Experience and How to Solve Them
1) Fear of Missing Out 2) Focusing on the Money and Not the Trade 3) Losing Objectivity in a Trade 4) Taking Risk Because you are Up (or down) Money Fear of missing out occurs when a trader is more afraid of missing an opportunity than they are of losing money. As a result, traders tend to overtrade in a desperate effort to ensure that they do not miss out on money-making situations. This overtrading can then potentially trigger an undertrading response if the traders experience a “trading injury” such as a big loss along the way. The way to solve this is first to accept the reality that you’re always going to miss out on something, somewhere. The second step is to establish game plans on paper and hold yourself accountable to executing those plans. Focusing on the money and not the trade limits performance because the trader quantifies their success based on their profit and loss data. As a result, when he or she is up or down a certain amount of money that they view as significant, they alter their trading behaviors regardless of what the actual, real trading opportunity is that is presented to them. The way to solve this is to quantify your success based on HOW you traded not HOW much you made on the trade. Did you have edge? Was it your pitch? Did you make a high-quality trade?
Losing objectivity in a trade occurs because traders develop emotional ties to their previous entry levels. The trader is no longer making trading decisions based on the trade, but rather based on how much they are up or down in the trade. The key to overcoming this is for the trader to continually ask him/herself, “Why am I in this trade?” and “If I was not in this trade right now, would I enter this trade long, short or do nothing?” (more…) |