“I believe there are a few reasons why only 5% make it.
1. They start in a position to not need to make a living from it. The need for steady money like a weekly paycheck will corrupt your thinking and force you to deviate from your plan of action that was so well thought out prior to the heat of the battle.
2. They do not need the money that they loose. The enormous amounts of money that it requires to learn to daytrade would exceed most people’s lifetime income. What makes the number of successful daytraders so low is that even the few who could make it, dont have enough capital to endure the learning curve.
3. They do not give a flying _uck about anything or anyones opinions of what the market will or might do. The very news and opinions that surround them becomes the mortar for their brick wall of defense that protects their completely independent thinking. (more…)
Archives of “February 2019” month
rssThe emotions of trading
When trading there are two emotions that are more common, and more dangerous, than all the rest; fear and greed.
Fear and greed can ruin even the best trading strategies
One moment of fear or greed can lead to a moment of madness and months of hard won profits going down the drain
Uncontrolled emotions should not be an excuse for losses and losses should not be an excuse for uncontrolled emotions
Remember!! Trading affects psychology as much as psychology affects trading
Greed
“You can’t feed on greed”
- Many people think that greed is thinking that the sole aim of trading is to make money.
- This is NOT what greed is
Greed is trying to make money too quickly
There are lots of ways to be greedy in trading;
- Trading in sizes that are too large
- Trading too frequently
- Having unrealistic expectations
- Dreaming of the big hit trade, rather than steadily building your equity
Fear
Fear in trading has two faces;
- Fear of loss
- Fear of missing out
The fear of loss compels traders to close profitable trades prematurely, meaning they miss out on potential profit
The fear of missing out compels traders to abandon their trading strategy so they do not miss a major price move
Fear is NOT good as it leads to overtrading and miss-timed entry and exit points
So
DON’T BE SCARED!!
Bear Markets -From 1929 To 2007 :Graphic
8 Points For Traders
Intellectual Flexibility
There is a difference between what you think it should happen and what ultimately happens, especially in the short-term perspective where supply and demand are defined not by fundamentals, but by fear and greed.
However strongly you believe in something and however coherent the case is, you need to be:
(1) willing to accept that you might be wrong, and
(2) able to take the position off even though you might not be wrong in the medium-term sense.
Market is like a woman
One is amazed by the similarities between the market and the femme fatale. Especially when you continue to chase the market with expectations of a reversal that never comes.
The more you chase it, the more parabolically it goes up. No matter how you count or look at indicators and candles, it simply goes up. When you finally give up, that is when the market surprises you once more with a sudden reversal and drop of prices.
In same way, you chase the femme fatale and that keeps you hooked and brings you near self destruction and obsession. When you finally give up exhausted and frustrated, she gets back at you once again. Looking for her prey…
A clear sign of overtrading
Tony Oz Trading Wisdom – The Stock Trader
Tony Oz: ‘The Stock Trader – How I make a living trading stocks.” Page 163-164
[…] The thing that drives me crazy about traders is that they always tell you about a great pick they had, and how they have left so much money behind. It is always about how much money they leave behind. I used to participate in these conversations myself, and I would share my grief about the trades that got away from me. In fact, I would even do so unintentionally while teaching a seminar. Now, every time I am about to tell a story about a trade that got away from me, I take a deep breath, and I tell myself, “No one really cares!” As they say,”Misery loves company.” You might be in pain for letting a big winner go early, and you feel you have to tell the world about it. It is not going to get you anywhere. Stop feeling sorry for yourself. It is impossible to be right all the time. When you are right and you have not capitalized on being right, you are simply wrong.
One of my dear friends bought XYZ stock at 70. The stock went up to 85, and he sold it. He never told me he was in the stock prior to him selling it, and after the stock has already declined back to 75. He was so proud of himself, because he bought it at 70 and sold it at 85, especially after the stock dropped back to 75; consequently, he did everything right. He then said to me, “keep an eye on it and buy it if it trades higher than 85. I have a stop buy order on it at 85 1/2 myself.” I never really followed XYZ stock; however, every time I spoke with my friend he would say, “did you see XYZ stock today? It went up a couple of bucks. It is my pick of the year!” A few months go by, and XYZ stock took out the 85 level. It was now at 180. My buddy is glowing. “I told you, it is my pick of the year,” he says. XYZ goes up to 240 and announces a 3 for 1 stock split. “It is my pick of the year,” my buddy says. The stock ten folds, it was a great pick. My buddy was right.
No! He was wrong! Although he made a great call, he never bought XYZ back once it hit his buy target! It was his pick of the year, and he has zero dollars to show for it. Moral of the story, put your money where your mouth is. Do not use the “I should have done…” phrase. Only speak about your actions, learn from your profits and losses.
40 Bits Of Wisdom
Live with intention
“Trade well and the money will come.”