RULE # 1:USE MONEY YOU CAN AFFORD TO LOSE
If you are trading With funds
1) You need for some family projects, you are doomed to failure.this is because you wont be able to enjoy the mental freedom to make sound trading decisions.
2)your trading funds should be viewed as money you are willing to lose. your position should be careful analysed so you don’t jeopardize other funds or assets.
3)one of the keys to successful trading is mental independance.
4)you have got to trade outside influencing factors and that means your trading freedom must not be influenced by the fear of losing money you really have earmarked for a specific need.
RULE # 2: KNOW YOURSELF
1)you need an objective temperament, an ability to control emotions and carry a position without losing sleep. Although trading discipline can be developed, the successful traders are unemotional about their positions.
2)there are many exciting things happening in the market everyday so it takes a hard nosed type of attitude and an ability to stand above short term circumstances.If you do not have this attitude you will be changing your mind and your positions every few minutes.
RULE # 3: START SMALL
1)Test your trading ability by making paper trades. then begin to trade small.start with mini account.
2) beginning traders should learn the mechanics of trading before graduating to more volatile contracts.
RULE # 4O NOT OVER COMMIT
1)One rule of thumb is to keep three times the money in your margin account than is needed for that particular position.Reduce your position if necessary to confirm to that rule.this rule helps you avoid trading decisions based on the amount of money in your margin account.
2) If you are under margined you may be forced to liquidate a position early at a costly loss that could have been avoided.
RULE # 5: ISOLATE YOUR TRADING FROM YOUR DESIRE FOR PROFIT.
1)do not hope for a move so much that your trade is based on hope. The successful trader is able to isolate his trading from his emotion. Although hope is a great virtue in other areas of life, it can be a real hindrance to a trader.
2)When hoping that the market will turn around in their favor beginners often violate basic trading rules. (more…)
Archives of “attitude” tag
rssThree types of traders

- -the first type can look at a idea or concept and understand and make it work
- -the second types are in search of perfection so the first thing they do is they find faults in any method, they back test to death and can never find things that will satisfy them.
- -the third kind are clueless. They do not understand good from bad. Everything to them is Greek or Latin.
Marty Schwartz- Trading Quotes
The marketplace is an arena and other traders are the adversaries. I turned from a loser to a winner when I was able to separate my ego needs from making money. When I was able to accept being wrong. Before that, admitting I was wrong was more upsetting than losing the money. When I became a winner I went from ‘I figured it out, therefore it can’t be wrong’ to ‘I figured it out, but if I’m wrong, I’m getting the hell out, because I want to save my money and go on to the next trade.’ By living the philosophy that my winners are always in front of me, it is not so painful to take a loss. If I make a mistake, so what! My attitude is: Never risk your family’s security. Whenever you get hit, you are very upset emotionally. Most traders try to make it back immediately; they try to play bigger. Whenever you try to get all your losses back at once, you are most often doomed to fail. After a devastating loss, I always play very small and try to get black ink, black ink. It’s not how much money I make, but just getting my rhythm and confidence back. Before taking a position always know the amount you are willing to lose. The most important thing is money management, money management, money management. Anybody who is successful will tell you the same thing. I always take my losses quickly. That is probably the key to my success. The best advice I can give to the ordinary guy trying to become a better trader is Learn to take losses. The most important thing in making money is not letting your losses get out of hand. |
5 bits of trading wisdom
- Most of the time, you want to own the stock before it breaks out, then sell it to the momentum players after it breaks out. If you buy breakouts, realize that professional traders are handing off their positions to you in order to test the strength of the trend. They will typically buy it back below the breakout point—which is typically where you will set your stop when you buy a breakout. Greed comes into play when the stock breaks out again, and the momentum players are forced to chase it and “pay up” for the stock. Be aware of how trends are established and use that to your advantage to enter and exit positions.
- Embracing your opinion leads to financial ruin. When you find yourself rationalizing or justifying a decline by saying things like, “They are just shaking out weak hands here,” or “The market makers are just dropping the bid here,” then you are embracing your opinion. Don’t hang onto a loser. Cut your losses. You can always get back in.
- Unfortunately, discipline is typically not learned until you have wiped out a trading account. Until you have wiped out an account, you typically think it cannot happen to you. It is precisely that attitude that makes you hold onto losers and rationalize them all the way into the ground.
- Siphoning out your trading profits each month and sticking them in a money market account is a good practice. This action helps to focus your attitude that this is a business, and your business should generate profits on a monthly basis.
- “Professional traders only place a small portion of their assets into 1 position. Or if they take on a large position, then they strictly limit their risk to 1-2% of their current equity. Amateurs typically place a large portion of their assets into 1 position, and they give it “room to move” in case they are actually right. This type of situation creates emotions that ruin accounts, while professionals are able to make decisions and cut losses because they strictly define their risk.”
Trading Wisdom for Traders
This exchange with a gentleman named Ed Seykota, who turned in a healthy 250,000 percent return for his clients over sixteen years, caught my eye:
What are the elements of good trading?
The elements of good trading are: (1) cutting losses, (2) cutting losses, and (3) cutting losses. If you can follow these three rules, you may have a chance.
How do you handle a losing streak?
I handle losing streaks by trimming down my activity. I just wait it out. Trying to trade during a losing streak is emotionally devastating. Trying to play “catch up” is lethal.
A little later in the interview, there was this:
What are the trading rules you live by?
a. Cut losses.
b. Ride winners.
c. Keep bets small.
d. Follow the rules without question.
e. Know when to break the rules.
Your last two rules are cute because they are contradictory. Seriously now, which do you believe: Follow the rules, or know when to break the rules?
I believe both. Mostly I follow the rules. As I keep studying the markets, I sometimes find a new rule which breaks and then replaces a previous rule. Sometimes I get to a personal breakpoint. When that happens, I just get out of the markets altogether and take a vacation until I feel that I am ready to follow the rules again. Perhaps some day, I will have a more explicit rule for breaking rules.
Never underestimate the importance of psychology and attitude as crucial elements of successful trading.