Archives of “February 2019” month
rssJust follow these Trading Rules
Stops – a stop price must be in place at all times for all positions.
Balance – this one is the hardest of all to define, but because it is impossible to know with certainty the future direction of the market, a balance between bullish and bearish positions is the most prudent. In addition, if you are heavily weighted either bullish or bearish, and if the market moves strongly in your favor intraday, you should consider taking on a large opposite day-trade position for “insurance” profits in case that intraday move reverses.
Freshness – positions should be regularly refreshed for the sake of updated stops. This is especially important when the market has moved in your direction a meaningful amount so that you can lock in some profits with tighter stops.
Emotional Awareness – use emotional awareness to your advantage, understanding fear often accompanies reversals in your favor and hubris often accompanies reversals against your positions.
Exits – the only acceptable exit is either being stopped out of a position or reaching a target price which has a clear technical rationale, and even in cases of the latter, partial exits are preferable to outright closes. (more…)
Elon Musk's -10 Rules For Success
Daniel Kahneman in Conversation with Michael Mauboussin on Intuition, Causality, Loss Aversion and More- vIDEO
Mindset
Discipline
Every day, every trade requires 100% discipline.
Discipline = Emotional Mastery, A Formula Of Confidence/Caution + Humility.
Confident but no caution = Arrogance. Cautious but not Confident = a lack of Conviction, Weakness.
A freedom from pride & Arrogance is Humility. A Weak Trader will never win in the long run.
A Super Trader = A Disciplined Trader. In Discipline, No Weakness Can Exist.
The truth about PRICE ACTION
Trading Nuggets
…to be right or wrong in a trade is NOT a decision. It is what happens. To STAY right or wrong IS a decision..we all trade what we believe happens next. Since NOBODY knows what happens next, we learn to think purely in probabilities. Does not matter what happens next. It is what you DO when you find out what happens next that separates winning traders from losing traders. —it is a marathon, not a sprint. Your job ONE as a trader is to protect trading equity. Most traders look at what they can make in a trade. NOT what they could lose. —Trade markets on YOUR terms…as the saying goes…much rather be in cash wishing I was in the market than being in the market wishing I was in cash. |
Thought For A Day
Cruel to be Kind
Many people come up to me, the most recent being a superior Greek Trader, Mr. Lambis, telling me that their two favorite books are Reminiscences of a Stock Operator and Edspec. I tell them they are cruel by being kind. Here’s why.
“History Lessons for Investors: An annotated reissue of Edwin LeFevre’s
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator is reviewed by hedge-fund manager and
author Victor Niederhoffer.”
IMAGINE THAT MASTER NOVELIST and chess
aficionado Vladimir Nabokov wrote a fictional memoir about
Capablanca—the 1920s world champion who never made a mistake on the
board—and that Bobby Fisher then published an updated and annotated
version, incorporating all of the important developments of modern
chess strategy, along with a foreword by Anatoly Karpov.A similar multilayered feast on investment is now available, with minor differences. Edwin Lefevre’s Reminiscences of a Stock Operator
is a novel told in the first person by a character inspired by
legendary trader Jesse Livermore. This classic is now graced with
extensive annotations by investment advisor Jon Markman and a foreword
by hedge-fund manager Paul Tudor Jones.The result is big and beautiful, cutting across two centuries of
booms and busts and market and economic history, with a myriad of
vintage historical photos and instructive historical charts throughout.One of Lefevre’s favorite adages is that there’s nothing new on Wall
Street. The similarity between the financial panic of 2008 and the 1907
panic recounted in the book is a prime example.The numerous squeezes, manipulations,
insider trading, government hauling in of scapegoats and frauds settled
for pennies on the dollar that Lefevre and Markman recount are horses
that are found as well in the modern stable.