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rssTaking risk will result in a good or bad experience. More importantly, you'll learn what works and what doesn't.
Why Lie?
10 Essential Trading Words
1. Simplicity – have a simple, well defined way to generate trading ideas. Have a simple approach towards the market. You can’t take everything into account when you try to make an educated decision. Filter the noise and focus on several key market components. For me, they are relative strength and earnings’ growth.
2. Common sense – create a trading system that is designed on the basis of proven trading anomaly. For example, trend following in different time frames.
3. Flexibility – be open to opportunities in both directions of the market. Be ready to get long and short.
4. Selectivity – chose only trades with the best risk/reward ratio; stocks with the best set ups; it doesn’t make sense to risk a dollar to make a dollar.
5. Don’t overtrade – two or three well planned trades in a week (month) might be more than enough to achieve your income goals. Patiently wait fot the right set up to form and to offer good risk/reward ratio.
6. Exit strategy – Always, absolutelly always have an exit strategy before you initiate a trade. Know at which point the market is telling you that you are wrong and do not hesitate to cut your losses short immediatelly. Don’t be afraid or ashamed to take a trading loss. Everyone has them. Just make sure that you keep their size to a minimum.
7. Let’s profits run – one or two good trades might make your month. One or two good months might make your year. Letting profits run is as important as cutting losses short. Bigger winners will allow you the luxury to be right in less than half of the trades and still be profitable.
8. Consistency – Stick to your method of trading ideas’ generation.
9. Specialize – Specialize in one or two distinct setups. It could be a combination of technicals and fundamentals, certain timeframe or special event as a trading catalyst, certain sector or trading vehicle.
10. Have a plan – Which are the stocks that you will be paying special attention to – this week, today. Why those stocks? In which direction you expect them to continue their move? What will give you a clue for the beginning of the move? Follow them exclusivelly and enter without a hesitation when they give you a signal. Don’t just wake up and sit in front of your monitor without having a clue what you are going to trade today.
Ed Seykota-Quotes Collection
- My style is basically trend following, with some special pattern recognition and money management
algorithms. - In order of importance to me are: (1) the long-term trend, (2) the current chart pattern, and (3) picking a good spot to buy or sell. Those are the three primary components of my trading. Way down in very distant fourth place are my fundamental ideas and, quite likely, on balance, they have cost me money.
- I consider trend following to be a subset of charting. Charting is a little like surfing. You don’t have to know a
lot about the physics of tides, resonance, and fluid dynamics in order to catch a good wave. You just have to be able to sense when it’s happening and then have the drive to act at the right time. - Common patterns transcend individual market behavior (my note: i.e. price patterns are similar across different markets).
Overall Rules
- Trade with the long-term trend.
- Cut your losses.
- Let your profits ride.
- Bet as much as you can handle and no more.
Buying on Breakouts
- If I were buying, my point would be above the market. I try to identify a point at which I expect the market momentum to be strong in the direction of the trade, so as to reduce my probable risk.
- I don’t try to pick a bottom or top.
- If I am bullish, I neither buy on a reaction, nor wait for strength; I am already in. I turn bullish at the instant
my buy stop is hit, and stay bullish until my sell stop is hit. Being bullish and not being long is illogical. (more…)
The Equation That Explains It All
If you were just woken from some form of suspended animation from let’s say 2010 (ancient economic history in today’s terms) then informed of the current state of global political affairs and upheavals, U.S. employment (95+million not,) global currency gyrations, interest rates at not only 0% but some -0%, threats of escalating wars, threats of major confrontational war, GDP of the major global economies not only contracting, but below statistical stagnant, governments, as well as central banks with balance sheets of debt calculated in $TRILLIONS, some in the 10’s of, all financed at near or below 0%, and the Fed is only about a week away from raising rates into the teeth of what can only be called “uncertainty,” and much, much more. (There isn’t enough time, or digital ink to list them all.)
Nobody would be surprised if your first reaction based on your prior acumen (the ancient history of 7 years ago whether it be in stocks, business, or both) would to become immediately concerned that whatever portfolio, or wealth you may have had in the markets, may be worth far less today than when you were first put to sleep. And probably becoming ever smaller as you thought about what you might need to do next in order to preserve any that may be left.
That is, till someone explained to you the markets you went to sleep knowing of – are no longer – and the reality of the markets today you could never have dreamed up. Even if they let you sleep another decade or longer.
Today, the markets you once knew of are better described as the “markets.”
To clear up any confusion as to how, or why, the “markets” can now be at “never before seen in the history of mankind highs” once again after the resounding “NO” vote in Italy, where the entire E.U. experiment is now seriously undermined, and falling apart in real-time (Brexit first, Italy will surely now vote next, etc., etc,) below is the calculation that explains it all.
For under the rules of: If A = B and B = C, then A = C, you now have the magical formula to understand with Einstein like surety today’s ‘markets.”
If you have any doubt to the soundness of this expression, consider the following:
If a financial crisis appears (A) The central banks will intervene (B)
If the central banks intervene (B) The “markets” go up (C)
Thus, we need more financial chaos (A) To make even more all time “market” highs (C)
Man is extremely uncomfortable with uncertainty.
People with "worldly wisdom" have developed a system. They read and think deeply about thinking.
Good Trade
- A good trade is taken with complete confidence and follows your trading method; a bad trade is taken on an opinion.
- A good trade is taken with a disciplined entry and position size; a bad trade is taken to win back losses the market owes you.
- A good trade is taken when your entry parameters line up; a bad trade is taken out of fear of missing a move
- A good trade is taken to be profitable in the context of your trading plan; a bad trade is taken out of greed to make a lot of money quickly.
- A good trade is taken according to your trading plan; a bad trade is taken to inflate the ego.
- A good trade is taken without regret or internal conflict; a bad trade is taken when a trader is double-minded.
- A good trade is based on your trading plan; a bad trade is based on emotions and beliefs.
- A good trade is based on your own personal edge; a bad trade is based on your opinion.
- A good trade is made using your own time frame; a bad trade changes timeframe due to a loss.
- A good trade is made in reaction to current price reality; a bad trade is made based on personal judgment.