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rssMindset of a winner -5 Quotes
– A losing trader can do little to transform himself into a winning trader. A losing trader is not going to want to transform himself. That’s the kind of thing winning traders do.
– The winning traders have usually been winning at whatever field they are in for years.
-It is a happy circumstance that when nature gives us true burning desires, she also gives us the means to satisfy them. Those who want to win and lack skill can get someone with skill to help them.
– The “doing” part of trading is simple. You just pick up the phone and place orders. The “being” part is a bit more subtle. It’s like being an athlete. It’s commitment arid mission. To the committed, a world of support appears. All manner of unforeseen assistance materializes to support and propel the committed to meet grand destiny.
– In your recipe for success, don’t forget commitment – and a deep belief in the inevitability of your success.
Can the Saudis destroy the NYMEX?
Read more here:
For Saudi Arabia, it is a philosophical issue that the black gold pouring out of its deserts should be treated as a tangible, physical commodity – not the paper plaything of traders on Wall Street hedging against the weak dollar. This thinking is at the heart of the Middle Eastern country’s decision last week to abandon its long alliance with West Texas Intermediate crude – the famous oil used by most global producers to price their exports to the US.
It is both a technical issue and a symbolic shift that strikes a blow to the domin-ance of the New York Mercan-tile Exchange, the world’s biggest centre of oil trading where the most popular products relate to WTI crude. (more…)
Discipline
Learning to accept losses as part of the game and cutting them short is the single most important step towards becoming consistently profitable. It sounds simple, but in reality is extremely difficult for everybody. Why? Because we’ve been taught that giving up is for losers and we should fight till last breath. I certainly agree that you should not give up quickly, but only if you can influence the end result. Let me be clear, the stock doesn’t know that you own it and it doesn’t care that you cannot afford to lose the money. The market will strip your last cloth if you don’t know how to manage risk. You have to understand and accept your power. You cannot move the market. You cannot tell him where to go and how fast. This is why so many people, who are successful as entrepreneurs and engineers, have troubles breaking even in the capital markets. It takes a special kind of person. Someone, who can forget his ego and concentrate on what actually works. Very few people are able to reach that level and to distinguish their trading life from their personal life.
Trading or investing is a skill that can be learned. There are two ways to learn a new skill in general. Through the school of hard knocks and through the mentorship of others that have the gift of teaching. To become a successful trader, you need to somehow implement both approaches. Nothing can replace personal experience. You can hire the best mentors in the world to teach you and purchase the most expensive equipment and trading software, but this is not going to help you to build a new skill. Skill building is subdued to eternal physical laws. There are a hundred billion neurons in your brain. For every skill that you possess (speaking a language or driving a car), there is a certain combination of connections between some of your neurons. To build a new skill, you need to build a new net of connections. This is why every beginning is hard, this is why big changes do not happen overnight. You have to establish new connections, which takes hard work via repetition and visualization. (more…)
Super Hero :Raghuram Rajan…..(Why Politicians ,Corporate Houses ,Financial Terrorists …Think This way ? )
Market Mind Games
Denise Shull, founder of the risk and performance advisory consulting firm ReThink Group, argues that traders and investors will improve their bottom lines if they better understand their emotions. Numbers, she writes, “look you in the eye and lie.” Both rationalism and empiricism come up short. The key to market success lies in leveraging emotional introspection and analysis into informed trading behavior—first and foremost, risk management.
In Market Mind Games: A Radical Psychology of Investing, Trading, and Risk (McGraw-Hill, 2012) Shull argues that we would “be able to extract a powerful advantage if we spent more time logically analyzing what the numbers cannot tell us.” (p. 20) Quantitative analyses are merely clues, not answers to what all traders are trying to figure out—other players’ future perceptions.
As it turns out, we all can predict (some admittedly better than others—perhaps an explanation for those seemingly natural born traders) what other people are going to do. This “pattern recognition of likely human behavior” is called “theory of mind,” or ToM. It is “the key to accurately reading markets.” (p. 63)
Looked at from another perspective, trading is a case study in dealing with uncertain scenarios (as opposed to risky situations). A 2005 study found that the brain handles risk and uncertainty differently; confronted with risk, blood takes a different route through the brain than it does when dealing with uncertainty. The researcher “proffered the idea of an ‘uncertainty circuit’ or the idea that a sort of red flag went up saying ‘more information needed.’”
Shull argues that this research undercuts “maybe the second most repeated rule of trading—‘plan the trade and trade the plan.’ … This supposed truism assumes a computer model of thinking. In practicality, it leaves very little room for context and certainly none for a warning flag that more information must be obtained. Traders try to do exactly what they planned while their brain fights them to find more information or to scramble in the face of a clear, but maybe only subconsciously perceived, threat.” (p. 77) That is, although it is important to start with the right type of game plan, “good judgment on the fly will be ultimately what wins the game (remember your brain when faced with uncertainty will make judgment calls whether you ask it to or not.)” (p. 117)
To be a successful trader it is not enough to read the markets. Traders must also read themselves to figure out (not control) what feelings, physical and emotional, are fueling their judgment calls.
Feelings should be viewed as data to be captured and then analyzed. “Just like if you had any new data set to work with, first you would try to get the scope of it, look at it from different angles to get a sense of what you were dealing with, and then go about ways to monitor, track, and categorize.” (p. 125) Knowing yourself and knowing how you feel (your emotional contexts) at any given time will give you a risk management edge. It will help you avoid those “What was I thinking?” moments.
Shull spends several chapters describing some of the most common emotions traders bring to their decisions. For instance, she asks the reader to determine where he is on the spectrum between the fear of losing money and the fear of missing out. (more…)
India: Records Reached, Temperatures to Touch 50C
Record temperatures in northern India have claimed hundreds of lives in what is believed to be the hottest summer in the country since records began in the late 1800s.
The death toll is expected to rise with experts forecasting temperatures approaching 50C (122F) in coming weeks. More than 100 people are reported to have died in the state of Gujarat where the mercury topped at 48.5C last week. At least 90 died in Maharashtra, 35 in Rajasthan and 34 in Bihar.
When so many things are traded in MCX-NCDEX then these exchanges should start trading in Temeratures too.
*New Instrument to trade or for Satta !!
*No Delivery -No Demat account needed !!
*First start with Metro’s temperatures and then increase cities.So Traders can trade in Summer ,Monsoon and Winter !!
Jago India Jago ……Jai ho
Updated at 1:08/31st May/Baroda
Paul Tudor Jones: Why most people lose money as traders, investors.
Wealth Principles
- Your income can grow only to the extent you do
- If you want to change the fruits, you will first have to change the roots. If you want to change the visible, you must first change the invisible.
- Money is a result, wealth is a result, health is a result, illness is a result, your weight is a result. We live in a world of cause and effect.
- Thoughts –> Feelings–>Actions–>Results TFAR
- When the subconscious mind must choose between deeply rooted emotions and logic, emotions will almost always win
- If your motivation for acquiring money or success comes from a non-supportive root such as fear, anger, or the need to “prove” yourself, your money will never bring you happiness
- The only way to permanently change the temperature in the room is to reset the thermostat. In the same way, the only way to change our level of financial success “permanently” is to reset your financial thermostat.
- Consciousness is observing your thoughts and actions so that you can live from true choice in the present moment rather than being run by programming from the past.
- You can choose to think in ways that will support you in your happiness and success instead of ways that don’t.
- Money is extremely important in the areas in which it works, and extremely unimportant in the areas in which it doesn’t.
- When you are complaining, you become a living breathing “crap magnet”
- There is no such thing as a really rich victim!
- If your goal is to be comfortable, chances are you’ll never get rich. But if your goal is to be rich, chances are you’ll end up mighty comfortable.
- The number one reason most people don’t get what they want is that they don’t know what they want.
- If you are not fully, totally, and truly committed to creating wealth, chances are you won’t.
- The Law of Income: You will be paid in direct proportion to the value you deliver according to the marketplace.
- “Bless that which you want.” -Huna philosophy
- The secret to success is not to try to avoid or get rid of or shrink from your problems; the secret is to grow yourself so that you are bigger than any problem.
- Money will only make you more of what you already are.
- The true measure of wealth is net worth, not working income.
- The habit of managing your money is more important that the amount
- Either you control money, or it will control you.
- The Rich see every dollar as a “seed” that can be planted to earn a hundred more dollars, which can then be replanted to earn a thousand more dollars
- Action is the “bridge” between the inner world and the outer world
- It is not necessary to try to get rid of fear in order to succeed
- If you are willing to do only what’s easy, life will be hard. But if you are willing to do what’s hard, life will be easy
- The only time you are actually growing is when you are uncomfortable
- Training and managing your own mind is the most important skill you could ever own, in terms of both happiness and success
The Heart and Mind of Trading
Your heart has a mind, and your mind has a heart. In trading we need to bring heart and mind together. We need to feel intelligently and think with informed emotion. The mind has intellectual emotion and the heart has emotional intellect.
It has been proven through heart transplants that the heart really does have a mind. Heart transplant recipients take on many characteristics, connections, habits, and hobbies of their donors. One woman who had never cared about dancing began to take ballroom dance lessons six weeks after her transplant. She became fascinated with ballroom dancing and became quite good at it. It turned out the donor of her heart had been a ballroom dancer. One child who had received the heart of another child upon seeing the dead child’s mother cried out, “Mommy, I’ve missed you!” And there are many other such reported instances.
It could even be assumed for the sake of this column, that the entire body, cell structure, and so forth are informed by both mind and heart. This is a column about trading, so let’s look at how mind and heart impact trading. We can start with the metaphors of mind and heart.
What is the heart of your trading? Is it analysis? Is it intuition? Is it thought corrected by feeling or feeling balanced by analysis? Is it an outside system created by you or someone else that you employ with emotional or thoughtful action?
Do you trade with heart? Do you put your whole self into it? And does that work for you?
Do you trade with an intellectual detachment? And does that support your chosen results?
What would happen if you brought the two together? What if you traded committed to your heart’s desire but also retained an intellectual remove from immediate results? What if you committed yourself to replicating a verified and trusted method in the market and retained an optimistic view of the final results even while you observed with curiosity the current unfolding of the market?
We need balance in life and in trading. By bringing heart and mind and even body into the trading, we can seek to bring all of ourselves into the equation. We can do it mindfully with heart and clear purpose.