“You adapt, evolve, compete or die.” – Paul Tudor Jones
I do not trade the same way I did when I started actively trading the stock market in the late nineties. The market itself has taught me many lessons about keeping my gains and cutting my losses short. I have traded through one of the biggest bull markets in history (1999) and one of the most vicious bear markets since the great depression (2008). I have learned when to trade big, when to trade small, and when not to trade at all. I have been taught the emotional pain of large losses when my ego wanted me to trade too big, and the pain of missing a huge move due to fear of entering a trade. I know what it feels like to lose $30,000 in my account in a few years and the feeling making $150,000 in a few years with minimum draw downs. I know the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. I have both lost $4,000 in a morning and made $4,000 in a day. In my quest to make money trading I have read several hundred books about trading and the markets. I have spent well over a thousand hours studying charts and historical price action and seen what works and what does not. I have culled from them what works for me.
What have I learned?
“Trading is an evolution of trader and system.” -Jonathan Keag
I have learned to play the long side in bull markets and the short side in bear markets.
I have learned to only risk 1% of my total trading capital on any one trade through proper position sizing and stop losses.
I have learned to trade based on solid principles and NOT my own opinions.
Focusing on the current market trend is the best way to make money.
When I do not understand the market action, it is best to do nothing.
Studying the greatest traders to ever live is a short cut to market success if you listen to what they have to say.
I have to trade the method that fits my personality.
I should have no regrets on my trading results if I followed my method and rules.
I can not predict anything, I can only attempt to follow what IS happening.
It is possible to pull six figures out of the market with the right homework and perseverance.