But Here U have to Fight with Many more things :Like Insider Trading +DATA Leak + Manipulation ++++
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rssTrading Book Review Of the Week: The Three Skills of Top Trading
This book is written about how three mutually reinforcing skills make a complete trader.
1). Pattern Recognition and Discretionary Trading.
Using the Wyckoff method you will see chart representations of how hot growth stocks are accumulated in bases for long periods of time. They eventually have pull backs then break out to new highs and trend. You will also see how they eventually have exhaustion tops on high volume that fail to rally and they begin to break down in distribution with lower lows and lower highs. The author encourages discretionary trading through experience by being able to identify market action through the models from past stocks. This work ties in nicely with the school of thought from legendary traders William J. O’Neil, Jesse Livermore, and Nicolas Darvas.
2). Behavioral finance and systems building.
The book teaches that readers must be flexible in their trading. We are merely a ship on a sea of market participant opinions. Follow the prevailing sentiment during the middle of the the trend, and go contrary to it at the extreme tops and bottoms. Hope, fear, and greed are the dangers and the movers of the market that cause support and resistance, trends, and chart patterns. The action of the stock market is nothing more than a manifestation of mass crowd psychology in action. The Pruden model shows a chart of how accumulation, mark-up, distribution, and markdown works in the market tied to price, volume, sentiment, and time. It truly explains how the price pattern and charts in growth stocks generally play out historically. (more…)
Must read for serious traders – common mistakes
1. Many futures traders trade without a plan. They do not define specific risk and profit objectives before trading. Even if they establish a plan, they “second guess” it and don’t stick to it, particularly if the trade is a loss. Consequently, they overtrade and use their equity to the limit (are undercapitalized), which puts them in a squeeze and forces them to liquidate positions.
Usually, they liquidate the good trades and keep the bad ones.
2. Many traders don’t realize the news they hear and read has already been discounted by the market.
3. After several profitable trades, many speculators become wild and aggressive. They base their trades on hunches and long shots, rather than sound fundamental and technical reasoning, or put their money into one deal that “can’t fail.”
4. Traders often try to carry too big a position with too little capital, and trade too frequently for the size of the account.
5. Some traders try to “beat the market” by day trading, nervous scalping, and getting greedy.
6. They fail to pre-define risk, add to a losing position, and fail to use stops. (more…)
Being "Scattered"
This is a diagram I drew to represent a very definite negative state associated with trading which I have called “being scattered”… I know many of you will know what this means. This could relate to various things in life, but lets just relate it to trading.
The big red dot of course represents a negative emotion, either from something like a large drawdown, frustration that you are not making progress, getting stopped out yet again, feeling as though you’ll never master this skill etc. The little blue dots are what happens to your ability to focus as a result. It just blows your thoughts to dust.
I find that when I enter this state, I start making lots of little crazy trades or I start tinkering with things, like indicators and EA’s or surfing the net and reading a million articles etc. I now tend to do that in my demo account in the name of experimentation but actually it is just negative undisciplined behavior. You just basically totally lose it. You come apart in your head.
Now the point is that this is the worst worst time to be trading – you need to get yourself out of it ASAP. The problem is I’ve observed you can be stuck in this state for days and not even realize.
The way I now get myself out of it is to do a massive conscious refocus. You have to STOP and start over.
Get clear on you goals. Do you want to be a professional or just mess about for ever wasting time and money? (These are the types of questions I say to myself). AND I find it’s important at these times to scale back – scale back in you margin, focus on practicing ONE THING at a time. Or even just leave it for a while.
I’ll tell you honestly what a big source of this is for me, the idea that it will possibly take me years to master this skill just throws a spanner in my works. Occasionally, perhaps after a trading loss, I’ll just get thrown into the scattered state – my head is buzzing with conflicting trading idea, like a swarm of flies. It’s all in a million disconnected pieces, I can remember it all but put non of it together. I’m confuuuuused!!!
Yra Harris on Patience (quote from Inside The House of Money)
Fibonacci Trading – Carolyn Boroden
Battle of Waterloo and Trading
I often talk about the Battle Of Waterloo and how it relates to trading in general and specifically strategy development. If you don’t know the battle (which I recommend reading about if you have time), just listen to this once popular country song and you’ll get a sense to why I think this is so important.
While I’m no historian, I do think traders can learn a lot about trading through learning about important battles in history. The Battle Of Waterloo offers a great example as it offers many lessons for us to consider:
Make your planning and risk analysis commensurate with the size of your project. For major endeavors, contingency plans are critical.
Know when to cut your losses if necessary. Don’t let your desire to succeed be the enemy of good judgment.
Be sure that the justification is clear for your project, and that your entire team is sold.
Don’t become over-confident, especially after many successes. Remember the basic principles.
Never attempt an unpopular endeavor in isolation.
Don’t make enemies. You are only as good as your allies.
Adopt leader style politics, not the Machiavellian style. Look for the win-win.
Many of these lessons apply to good trading, especially the ones about the importance of having contingency plans, knowing when to cut losses, having clear justifications for your trades, the importance of avoiding overconfidence and finally how important it is to attack from a strong position like having plenty of capital and cash reserves.
Needless to say, every trading strategy has their own weaknesses. So, what the most common weakness I’ve found? That’s easy – human error. That’s right, usually most strategies that have been backtested and proven to work continue to work well unless we do things to either deviate from the plan and/or we apply leverage to it rendering it extremely vulnerable. It is fairly often that I see traders come forward with a hot strategy they’ve used and are in the process of levering it up, creating havoc and exposing themselves to great risk. There is good reason for the expression – leverage always kills. In my experience, that has been true. Beyond that, many strategies are based on things that don’t account for the constantly evolving nature of the market. (more…)