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26 -W. D. Gann’s Never-Failing / Valuable Rules

  1. Amount of capital to use: Divide your capital into 10 equal parts and never risk more than one-tenth of your capital on any one trade.
  2. Use stop loss orders. Always protect a trade when you make it with a stop loss order 1 to 3 cents, never more than 5 cents away, cotton 20 to 40, never more than 60 points away. (3 to 5 points away for stocks)
  3. Never overtrade. This would be violating your capital rules.
  4. Never let a profit run into a loss. After you once have a profit of 3 cents or more, raise your stop loss order so that you will have no loss of capital. For cotton when the profits are 60 points or more place stop where there will be no loss.
  5. Do not buck the trend. Never buy or sell if you are not sure of the trend according to your charts and rules.
  6. When in doubt, get out, and don’t get in when in doubt.
  7. Trade only in active markets. Keep out of slow, dead ones.
  8. Equal distribution of risk. Trade in 2 or 3 different commodities, if possible. (Trade in 4 or 5 stocks, is possible.) Avoid tying up all your capital in any one commodity or stock.
  9. Never limit your orders or fix a buying or selling price. Trade at the market.
  10. Don’t close your trades without a good reason. Follow up with a stop loss order to protect your profits.
  11. Accumulate a surplus. After you have made a series of successful trades, put some money into a surplus account to be used only in emergency or in times of panic.
  12. Never buy or sell just to get a scalping profit. Never buy just to get a dividend.
  13. Never average a loss. This is one of the worst mistakes a trader can make.
  14. Never get out of the market just because you have lost patience or get into the market because you are anxious from waiting.
  15. Avoid taking small profits and big losses.
  16. Never cancel a stop loss order after you have placed it at the time you make a trade.
  17. Avoid getting in and out of the market too often.
  18. Be just as willing to sell short as you are to buy. Let your object be to keep with the trend and make money.
  19. Never buy just because the price of a commodity or stock is low or sell short just because the price is high
  20. Be careful about pyramiding at the wrong time. Wait until the commodity or stock is very active and has crossed Resistance Levels before buying more and until it has broken out of the zone of distribution before
    selling more.
  21. Select the commodities that show strong uptrend to pyramid on the buying side and the ones that show definite downtrend to sell short. For stocks, select the stocks with small volume of shares outstanding to pyramid on the buying side and the ones with the largest volume of stock outstanding to sell short.
  22. Never hedge. If you are long of one commodity or stock and it starts to go down, do not sell another commodity or stock short to hedge it. Get out at the market; take your loss and wait for another opportunity.
  23. Never change your position in the market without good reason. When you make a trade, let it be for some good reason or according to some definite rule; then do not get out without a definite indication of a
    change in trend.
  24. Avoid increasing your trading after a long period of success or a period of profitable trades.
  25. Don’t guess when the market is top. Let the market prove it is top. Don’t guess when the market is bottom. Let the market prove it is bottom. By following definite rules, you can do this.
  26. Do not follow another man’s advice unless you know that he knows more than you do.
  27. Reduce trading after first loss; never increase.
  28. Avoid getting in wrong and out wrong; getting in right and out wrong; this is making double mistakes.

How To Fail As A Trader In 10 Easy Steps

royal-fail

There is so much ink and pixels spilled on how to succeed in trading. So I thought, I would zag instead of zig and outline how to fail as a trader. Without further ado, the 10 vital steps you must take in order to fail in trading:

  1. Start out undercapitalized
  2. Ignore risk management
  3. Compare yourself to other traders, not yourself
  4. Look for the right system
  5. Don’t keep a journal
  6. Be secretive
  7. Be casual
  8. Fill your charts with as many indicators as possible
  9. Trade with your emotions
  10. Be inconsistent

Paul Tudor Jones :12 Quotes (Must Read Every Day )

  1. “The secret to being successful from a trading perspective is to have an indefatigable and an undying and unquenchable thirst for information and knowledge.”

  2. “Intellectual capital will always trump financial capital.”

  3. “Every day I assume every position I have is wrong.”

  4. “Losers average losers.”

  5. “You adapt, evolve, compete or die.”

  6. “Trading is very competitive and you have to be able to handle getting your butt kicked.”

  7. “The whole world is simply nothing more than a flow chart for capital.”

  8. “At the end of the day, the most important thing is how good are you at risk control.”

  9. “Always think of your entry point as last night’s close.”
  10. “I will keep cutting my position size down as I have losing trades. When I am trading poorly, I keep reducing my position size. That way, I will be trading my smallest position size when my trading is worst.”
  11. “Don’t be a hero. Don’t have an ego. Always question yourself and your ability. Don’t ever feel that you are very good. The second you do, you are dead.”
  12. “Markets trend only about 15 percent of the time; the rest of the time they move sideways.”

Why Trading is Difficult

difficult-11. Need to internalize lots of trading simulation of specific set-ups in real-time to trade effortlessly
2. Need to trust money management system to weather +10 losses in a row
3. Tuff to internalize that its the 5-6 huge monthly runners that is the big pay-off days
4. Must master +3 trade set-ups to make money consistently month to month.
5. It takes considerable time to mathematically think and act like a trader
6. Trading is a performance skill which requires mastery of every element of trading
7. It requires time capital and considerable effort to achieve the experience to make it effortless and automatic
8. It takes several attempts at different trading methodology to sync with a trader’s personality and cognitive strengths
9. It takes time to set and internalize specific rules that embed a sense of mastery
10. To survive in trading requires weathering the lengthy learning curve

Over Trader Anonymous : Here's A Great Tip

overeating

Over trading is the single most damaging thing to an account. the commissions alone will eventually slowly eat away at capital and that’s not even taking into consideration the mental and emotional drain you will go thru. Your soul goes into a dark place when you over trade and get poor results. Sometimes it made me even angry and i used to lash out at others.It took me years to figure out that trading more ironically meant more losses, (more…)

40+40+5 Super Wealthy People Have More Money Than The Poorest 3.5 Billion Combined

The global economy is structured to systematically funnel wealth to the very top of the pyramid, and this centralization of global wealth is accelerating with each passing year. According to the United Nations, 85 super wealthy people have more money than the poorest 3.5 billion people on the planet combined.  And 1.2 billion of those poor people live on less than $1.25 a day.  There is something deeply, deeply broken about a system that produces these kinds of results.  Seven out of every ten people on the planet live in countries where the gap between the wealthy and the poor has increased in the last 30 years.  Despite our technological advances, somewhere around a billion people go to bed hungry every single night.  And when our fundamentally flawed financial system finally does collapse, it will be the poor that will suffer the worst.

Now, let me make one thing clear at the outset.

Big government and more socialism are not the answer to anything.  Big government and more socialism almost always result in increased oppression and increased poverty.  If you want to see where that road ultimately leads to, just look at North Korea.

What we need is a system that empowers individuals and families to work hard, be creative, build businesses and to take care of themselves.

But instead, we have a system where all power and all wealth are increasingly controlled by giant banks and giant corporations that are in turn controlled by the global elite.  The “financialization” of the global economy has turned almost everyone on the planet into “deft serfs”, and the compound interest on all of that debt enables the global elite to constantly increase their giant piles of money.

As I have written about previously, the total amount of government debt in the world has increased by about 40 percent since the last recession. (more…)

Trading Rules: Strategies For Success

tradingrulesforsuccess
1. Divide your trading capital into ten equal risk segments
2. Use a two-step order process
3. Don’t overtrade
4. Never let a profit turn into a loss
5. Trade with the trend
6. If you don’t know what’s going on, don’t do anything
7. Tips don’t make you any money
8. Use the right order to get into the markets
9. Don’t be whimsical about closing out your trades
10. Withdraw a portion of your profits
11. Don’t buy a stock only to obtain a dividend
12. Don’t average your losses
13. Take big profits and small losses
14. Go for the long pull as an outside speculator
15. Sell shorts as often as you go long
16. Don’t buy something because it is low priced
17. Pyramid correctly, if at all
18. Decrease your trading after a series of successes
19. Don’t formulate new opinions during market hours
20. Don’t follow the crowd – they are usually wrong
21. Don’t watch or trade too many markets at once
22. Buy the rumor, sell the fact
23. Take windfall profits when you get them
24. Keep charts current
25. Preserve your capital
26. Nothing new ever occurs in the markets
27. Money cannot be made every day from the markets
28. Back your opinions with cash when they are confirmed by market action
29. Markets are never wrong, opinions often are
30. A good trade is profitable right from the start
31. As long as a market is acting right, don’t rush to take profits
32. Never permit speculative ventures to turn into investments
33. Don’t try to predetermine your profits
34. Never buy a stock because it has a big decline from its previous high, nor sell a stock because it is high priced
35. Become a buyer as soon as a stock makes new highs after a normal reaction
36. The human side of every person is the greatest enemy to successful trading
37. Ban wishful thinking in the markets
38. Big movements take time to develop
39. Don’t be too curious about the reasons behind the moves
40. Look for reasonable profits
41. If you can’t make money trading the leading issues, you aren’t going to make it trading the overall markets
42. Leaders of today may not be the leaders of tomorrow
43. Trade the active stocks and futures
44. Avoid discretionary accounts and partnership trading accounts
45. Bear markets have no supports and bull markets have no resistance
46. The smarter you are, the longer it takes
47. It is harder to get out of a trade than to get into one
48. Don’t talk about what you’re doing in the markets
49. When time is up, markets must reverse
50. Control what you can, manage what you cannot

Hallmark of a Position Day Trader

hallmark-trader

  • Routine and Predictable daily methodology
  • Psychological Control: Discipline, Focus, Patience
  • Macro vs Micro Market Analysis … seeing the Big Picture
  • Comprehensive intraday Hit List analysis
  • Multiple intraday Set-up opportunities
  • Various chart pattern recognition … low risk opportunities
  • Capital preservation = risking less than 50% maximum stop loss.
  • Expectation & Time Exits: Scalp, Breakeven, Profit Target, Let Profits Run
  • Trading Execution Commitment: honoring Set-up signals, not P&L
  • A modern French Karl Marx Jr

    Thomas Piketty’s new book Capital in the Twenty-First Century named to seem similar to Das Kapital supposedly proves that capital is bad for everyone, and some people owning a lot of it is REALLY bad.

    The solution? Tax the heck out of their wealth, and globally because destroying wealth will create more of it. All data-driven, because in France economists are not respected and need to prove their case. Since Marx Sr. had such a pleasant impact, who knows what this book destined to be “something big” and much appreciated in a thorough Harvard Business Review review will bring?

    The 20 Rules of Trading

    artimg51

    1. Never, under any circumstance add to a losing position…. ever! Nothing more need be said; to do otherwise will eventually and absolutely lead to ruin!
    2. Trade like a mercenary guerrilla. We must fight on the winning side and be willing to change sides readily when one side has gained the upper hand. (more…)