An ostrich will hide itself by lying flat against the ground, or run away when frightened. In dangerous situation, it will stick its head in the ground.
In the stock market, an ostrich is referred to as someone who ignores bad news even when bad news is clearly affecting his portfolio. He will ignore the market and pretend not to know anything. It is not advisable to be an ostrich.
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rssThe More You Sweat in Practise ,The Less You Bleed in Battle -Applicable in Life & Trading
Do Your Homework ,Before You Start your Trading :Atleast spend 4-5 Daily after or Before Market Opens and see result
Enthusiasm Brings About A Triumph
The greatest victories in life rarely come from those who are sad, pessimistic or lacking enthusiasm.
When we approach challenges in any area with enthusiasm, we set a new foundation that starts us off on the right foot. This does not automatically happen. We all need to decide that we are going to start changing the way we begin our trading sessions.
Before we jump on our computer and look at our charts and start executing trades, take about 15 minutes to set the tone for this session. Take a few deep breaths, forget about the list of tasks that you have to deal with today, get a piece of paper and write down 1 or 2 items that you will focus on during today’s trades.
Once you have your mind set and your 2 items ready; say out loud “I am ready to trade”. Say this with enthusiasm and then sit down and begin.
You will have a new perspective on today which does not include focusing on the profit results, but instead on the process. Your trading session will have new meaning and you are now set to be triumphant in today’s trades.
Billion Dollar Day – A 1986 Documentary About Forex Speculative Trading (Must Watch Video )
Think ,Still In India Nobody will dare to Trade like………………Just watch above video
Great advice from Taleb commencement address. 1) Skin in the game. 2) Make yourself anti-fragile. I'm trying!
7 Steps to Happiness
The Crash of 1929 -Video
Here is a link to the transcript of this documentary.
Narrator: At sea and on land, everyone seemed to be making money. It was a stampede of buying. And major speculators like John Jacob Rascob whipped up the frenzy. He told readers of The Ladies’ Home Journal that now everyone could be rich. September 2nd, Labor Day. It was the hottest day of the year. The markets were closed and people were at the beach. A reporter checked in with astrologer Evangeline to ask about the future of stock prices. Her answer: the Dow Jones could climb to heaven. The very next day, September 3rd, the stock market hit its all-time high.
Ben Karol, Former Newspaper Delivery Boy: My father and I had an ongoing discussion about the stock market. And I used to say, “Pop, everybody’s getting rich but you. You know, you work so hard and you’re never going to make a nickel. All you do is you keep delivering these newspapers and that’s about it. The guy who’s shining shoes is in the stock market, the grocery clerk is in the stock market, the school teacher’s in the stock market. The teller at the bank is in the stock market. Everybody’s in the stock market. You’re the only one that’s not in the stock market.” And he used to sit and laugh and say, “You’ll see. You’ll see. You’ll see.”
Narrator: On September 5th, economist Roger Babson gave a speech to a group of businessmen. “Sooner or later, a crash is coming and it may be terrific.” He’d been saying the same thing for two years, but now, for some reason, investors were listening. The market took a severe dip. They called it the “Babson Break.” The next day, prices stabilized, but several days later, they began to drift lower. Though investors had no way of knowing it, the collapse had already begun
IMF Seeking Boost In Lending Cap By $250 Billion To $1 Trillion
In the latest sign yet that things in the world are roughly 25% worse than expected (give or take), the FT reports that the IMF will seek an imminent rise in its lending cap from $750 billion to $1 trillion to build safety nets that could prevent financial crises. “Even when not in a time of crisis, a big fund, likely to intervene massively, is something that can help prevent crises,” Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the IMF managing director told the Financial Times. “Just because the financing role decreases, doesn’t mean we don’t need to have huge firepower … a $1,000bn fund is a correct forecast.” At this point it is glaringly obvious that without the explicit support of the various central banks and of such fake international but really US organizations as the IMF, the already prevalent liquidity crisis would simply destroy the world. The troubling theme is that instead of taking away incremental worries, we have now gotten to the point where one bailout, like a butterfly in China, merely requires 10 more down the road. Alas, instead of a virtuous Keynesian dynamic, this is anything but.
Some more on the IMF’s feeble attempt at justifying the need for its exploding funding requirements, as well as its own attempt to validate that all is well:
South Korea, as this year’s president of the Group of 20 leading economies, is helping craft the plan. Seoul hopes to convince the G20 countries to back the increased IMF funding at a summit in South Korea in November. The G20 meeting in London in 2009 tripled IMF resources from $250bn. A US official said Washington was sympathetic to improved safety nets but needed more details on the Korean-IMF plan.
South Korean economists forged the plan because of their own bitter experience of their currency and stock market plunging in 2008. In spite of robust economic fundamentals, Seoul needed to be rescued from a dangerous liquidity shortfall by swaps from the US, Japan and China. (more…)
The Paradox: a surgeon versus a trader (Why 95% Traders Lose Money ? )
“Have you ever met someone who goes to a bookstore on a Friday, buys a book on surgery, read it over the weekend and attempt to go into the operating theater on Monday and start to operate like a real surgeon?”
Every single one of the audience agreed there is a zero chance that this man could perform a successful surgery just by reading a surgery textbook over the weekend.
However, Jack went on to ask the next question,
“Have you ever met someone who goes to a bookstore on a Friday, buys a book on trading, read it over the weekend and attempts to head into the market on Monday and start to trade like he is a professional trader?”
The audience giggled upon Jack’s second question, which probably suggested that this example of a aspiring trader is a common occurence.
The fact, as Jack explained, is that anyone with zero experience in surgery will almost definitely fail in his first duty as a surgeon.
But someone who has zero experience in trading could still potentially make money (sometimes a lot) on his initial trades!
This paradox gives people a general false feeling that trading is and can be very easy for any newbie.
According to Jack, the truth is that in order to be a profitable trader in the long run, you will have to put in effort in honing your trading skills.
The effort will be as much as a trainee surgeon who spend years of his life learning how to become a proficient surgeon.
When a newbie trader’s beginners luck runs out, he will start losing a lot of money, usually much more than the amount he made during his lucky winning streak.
So, if you are a amateur trade and if you want to become a proficient trader over the long run, there is simply no short cut way for you.
You will have to spend years honing your trading skills until you become one of those market wizards.