- You must have a Mission Statement. What’s your real motivation behind your trading?
- You must spell out your trading/investing Goals and Objectives. You cannot get from A to Bvery easily unless you truly know where B is.
- You must spell out your Trading/Investing Beliefs and Market Beliefs. Please remember this very important statement, “You cannot trade the market. You can only trade your beliefs about the market.” Therefore, it’s a very good idea to identify your beliefs about the market first.
- Spell out your exact Trading Strategies. How do you go about analyzing the market and what are the key things you look at in your market analysis? What trade set-ups do you use before entry? What are your timing signals for market entry? What is your catastrophe stop loss? Where and when will you take profits? Will you use a trailing stop? Will you scale into the market? What exactly is your trade management system once you’re into the trade?
- What are your Position Sizing Strategies? This is part of money management and is very important in reaching your trading goals and objectives in terms of profitability.
- What are your typical Psychological Problems in following your trading plan? What is your plan for psychological management for dealing with these problems?
- What are your Daily Trading Procedures? What should you be doing on a daily basis, not only to become organized, but to become methodical in everything you do as a trader, on a day-to-day basis.
- Do you have an Education Plan to Help Improve Yourself on a continuing basis? If not, you should have one. Like anything else in life, you need to be continually working on yourself to become better and better.
- What is your Disaster Plan? What can go wrong, and how will you deal with each item?
- What is your Planned Income and Budget for Trading Expenses? This is pretty simple and straightforward; write down everything you can think of and try to be as realistic as possible.
- How do you Prevent Trading Mistakes and Avoid Repeating Them… if they occur? Really sit back and think about this and write down any and all mistakes that you might make during your trading. Once you do that, come up with a solution to each potential mistake that you might make so you don’t allow that to happen.
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rssSurviving the Trading Game
Trading coach Van Tharp has a trading game he lets his students play. In a class of 20 to 30 people he will pull different color marbles out of a bag to determine whether the classes trades are winners or losers and by what multiple. There are overall more winning marbles than losers marbles in the bag making this hypothetical trading system a robust system. In the long term the traders playing the game should make money. While the class all receives the same win and loss results during the game some players blow up their account to zero very quickly and others end up with great returns during the game. What is going on? What makes the difference? Each individual traders bet size and the amount of capital at risk determines whether they win or lose even though they are all getting the same trading results in wins and losses. The traders that bet too much and lose at the beginning of the game blow up quickly, the ones that bet big and win in the beginning start in the lead but blow up their accounts later. The best risk managers in the game win primarily by simply surviving their first consecutive string of losses while others do not. The winners also are able to grow their bet size during winning streaks as their capital grows. They bet more as they win and less as they lose by defining a percent of their total capital as a risk multiple that they can expose to losses.
So you see in the trading game, after a trader has a robust system it is still the best risk managers that win in the long term. (more…)
Don't Try to Predict Your Own Behavior
“It’s easy to see, hard to foresee.” ~ Ben Franklin
How often have you accurately predicted your reaction to emotion-provoking events in your life?
When the stock market gets volatile as it has been in recent weeks, I am reminded of the irrelevence of risk tolerance questionnaires. If you’ve ever sat down with an investment advisor or financial planner, you’ve likely seen or heard the questions that try to predict how you might react in various stock market scenarios.
For example:
“If your investment portfolio were to fall by 20% in the course of one year, how would you react? Would you A) Do nothing, B) Wait a few months to make a decision, or C) Sell your stocks immediately?” (more…)
Tomorrow's Webinar on- Three Less Known Trading Indicators by Anirudh Sethi
Time : 10 :00 AM to 11:45 AM
Date : 27th Jan ‘2018
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Technically Yours /Anirudh Sethi
10 Great Quotes of Nassim Nicholas Taleb
1. “Writers are remembered for their best work, politicians for their worst mistakes, and businessmen are almost never remembered.”
2. “The main difference between government bailouts and smoking is that in some rare cases the statement ‘this is my last cigarette’ holds true.”
3. “Nation-states like war; city-states like commerce; families like stability; and individuals like entertainment.”
4. “The nation-state: apartheid without political incorrectness.”
5. “I find it inconsistent (and corrupt) to dislike big government while favoring big business—but (alas) not the reverse.”
6. “For Seneca, the Stoic sage should withdraw from public efforts when unheeded and the state is corrupt beyond repair. It is wiser to wait for self-destruction.”
7. “In politics we face the choice between warmongering, nation-state-loving, big-business agents on one hand; and risk-blind, top-down, epistemic arrogant big servants of large employers on the other. But we have a choice.”
8. “The role of the media is best seen in the journey from Cato the Elder to a modern politician. Do some extrapolation if you want to be scared.”
9. “The best test of whether someone is extremely stupid (or extremely wise) is whether financial and political news makes sense to him.”
10. “Never listen to a leftist who does not give away his fortune or does not live the exact lifestyle he wants others to follow.”