rss

Two Rules for Traders

In a losing game such as trading, we shall start against the majority and assume we are wrong until proven correct! (We do not assume we are correct until proven wrong.) Positions established must be reduced and removed until or unless the market proves the position correct! (We allow the market to verify correct positions.)

 

Rule Number Two :

Press your winners correctly without exception.

Impulse Trades

Three things to know about Impulse trades for scalpers:

  • Impulse Trades are a strict No-No
  • If you do take it by mistake, don’t do it again if you want to be a serious profit-making trader
  • Ok, you did take an impulse trade ? Do the following:
    Watch it more carefully than you would do with a normal trade that follows your system.
    Keep a stop loss or limit in mind immediately and no matter what, GET OUT at that level. If it moves in your direction, trail it with the same rigourous discipline.

10 Lessons for Traders

1. Trading affects psychology as much as psychology affects trading – This was really the motivating factor behind my writing the new book. Many traders experience stress and frustration because they are trading poorly and lack a true edge in the marketplace. Working on your emotions will be of limited help if you are putting your money at risk and don’t truly have an edge.

2. Emotional disruption is present even among the most successful traders – A trading method that produces 60% winners will experience four consecutive losses 2-3% of the time and as much time in flat performance as in an uptrending P/L curve. Strings of events (including losers) occur more often by chance than traders are prepared for.

3. Winning disrupts the trader’s emotions as much as losing – We are disrupted when we experience events outside our expectation. The method that is 60% accurate will experience four consecutive winners about 13% of the time. Traders are just as susceptible to overconfidence during profitable runs as underconfidence during strings of losers.

4. Size kills – The surest path toward emotional damage is to trade size that is too large for one’s portfolio. We experience P/L in relation to our portfolio value. When we trade too large, we create exaggerated swings of winning and losing, which in turn create exaggerated emotional swings. (more…)

Go to top