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Kill The TV

kill your TVIf you are waiting for the TV clowns to tell you where to invest and How to trade , you are missing the point. Successful investing and trading  is a skill, which can be learned and developed. The last thing you want to do is to let others tell you how to invest your own money. Instead, invest your time and energy in developing your own investing strategy. Kill the TV for good and become an independent thinker. Profits will follow.

Placing Time Limits On Reading Others

opinion-There’s a Danish proverb that says that “he who builds according to every man’s advice will have a crooked house.” The same is true with trading and the experience you share is quite common.

While there are some excellent role models out there to read and learn from, it takes time and lots of experience to be able to properly filter through the noise and learn how to recognize subjective and/or faulty analysis. It really is a unique skill and one that is not very common unless you’ve been at it for awhile and/or developed that skill through your education and career.

Although most traders don’t feel confident about their strategies to be able to trade in complete isolation (at least not for very long), there is a tremendous benefit from doing so. In my view, traders are now being flooded with too much real-time data, information, and opinions and they’re struggling to cope, make sense of it, and then focus on what matters. Remember, more information and analysis does not translate into better performance and we all have to place strict time limits on the energy we devote to reading the thoughts of others.

"Maintaining Sanity in a Schizophrenic Market"

The current market seems to be manic depressive without even a shred of memory from one day to the next.  How does a trader preserve control and commitment when faced with this challenge?

I think the first place to begin is with the questions we ask ourselves.  Is there an opportunity here? Where is the opportunity now?  How can I take advantage of this opportunity?

Then ask yourself, how do I deal with the volatility?  Do I decrease size and stretch out the risk parameters?  Do I increase size to take advantage of this extraordinary opportunity?  Do I shorten or increase my time frames to increase my safety and profitability?  As traders we are always faced with the dual needs to seize a significant opportunity and to preserve our capital.  This balancing act is at the core of trading.

Of course, you need to address the underlying fundamentals.   What are they? Are they becoming more so or less so?  Are they changing or remaining the same?

Define the problems you are facing and redefine them.  Einstein was asked how he would go about solving a problem if he only had 60 minutes in which to solve it.  He answered that he would spend the first 59 minutes defining the problem.  Once you’ve identified and defined the issues you’re facing, look for workable solutions.  See problems as challenges not as threats.  I always assume if there is a problem, there is a solution.  Once you’ve found a solution, test it.

You need to sustain an optimistic outlook.  This means not taking market conditions personally.  Know that the difficulties will pass as well as the opportunities.  You can learn from difficulties and let them go even as you learn from and utilize opportunities.  Keep honing your skills and see the glass as more than half full.  You can heal your trading by finding a way to understand evil even as you find a way to make the best of a situation.  Any crisis can make you stronger if you don’t let it make you weaker.

So let’s go back to the original question.  Where is the opportunity here and now, and how do you go about taking full advantage of it?  When you find it, go for it.  If you don’t find it, wait for it to develop, and carpe diem (seize the day).

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