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Never Break Rule

It seems like there has been a steady stream of information and opinion flowing on breaking rules. Originally I had planned to talk about the pros and cons of breaking rules. I realized that would be a disservice.  The following is not negotiable.

Day trader vs professional trader.

Rules are what separate a day trader from a professional trader. The only good time to break a rule is never. Barriers are made to be broken not rules, you can have one or the other not both. If you break a rule, what power does anyone of the other rules have? Do you have a rule for breaking rules and what if you break those rules? It adds unnecessary levels of complication.

The most important rule.

Eventually I will back traders assuming there is not some horrible tax or regulation that makes it a stupid risk. A trader must create their own rules. They know themselves the best. The rule that cannot ever be broken is losing more than limit down. I will fire them that day. I do not even like to take clients who break that rule. They are destined to fail. (more…)

For many traders, promising to follow rules doesn’t work for long

How many times have you broken the rules?

For many traders, promising to follow rules doesn’t work for long. One reason is willpower fatigue, a well-documented phenomenon.  I regularly receive emails from traders who are very bright and hard working – often with a degree from a top school or a successful prior career– and they are so frustrated with themselves about ‘breaking rules’ in trading.

For most traders, the work required to succeed is not what was expected. Trading discipline is not about willpower to follow rules. It seems like that on the surface, and it sort of is in the beginning of one’s trading career, but there are three reasons why simple willpower is not the answer for long-term success:

First, discretionary trading means by its very definition that we must use our judgment to make a decision – not simply use willpower to follow a rule. (more…)

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.

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