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19+1 Trading Rules For Traders

1. Forget the news, remember the chart. You’re not smart enough to know how news will affect price. The chart already knows the news is coming.20-RULES

2. Buy the first pullback from a new high. Sell the first pullback from a new low. There’s always a crowd that missed the first boat.

3. Buy at support, sell at resistance. Everyone sees the same thing and they’re all just waiting to jump in the pool.

4. Short rallies not selloffs. When markets drop, shorts finally turn a profit and get ready to cover.

5. Don’t buy up into a major moving average or sell down into one. See #3.

6. Don’t chase momentum if you can’t find the exit. Assume the market will reverse the minute you get in. If it’s a long way to the door, you’re in big trouble.

7. Exhaustion gaps get filled. Breakaway and continuation gaps don’t. The old trader’s wisdom is a lie. Trade in the direction of gap support whenever you can. (more…)

13 Things :5 % of Successful Traders Do Differently

  1. They pursue realistic goals as their returns.
  2. They take decisive and immediate action when their buy or sell signal is hit.
  3. They focus on winning trades and not quantity of trades.
  4. They make logical, informed trading decisions within their system, based on the probabilities.
  5. They avoid the trap of trying to make perfect trades, and instead focus on being profitable in the long term.
  6. They trade the right position size that is within their comfort zone.
  7. They keep things simple and focus on winning trades, not complexity in their trading.
  8. They focus on learning and making small continuous improvements in their trading system.
  9. They measure and track their progress with a trading journal.
  10. They maintain a positive outlook as they learn from their mistakes, and focus on trading with discipline.
  11. They spend time learning from better traders.
  12. They maintain balance in their life by spending time with family and friends.
  13. They love what they do and their passion keeps them going through the rough times.

14 Meaningless Stock Market Phrases

14 Meaningless Phrases That Will Make You Sound Like A Stock-Market Wizard

“The easy money has been made.”
“I’m cautiously optimistic.”
“It’s a stockpicker’s market.”
“It’s not a stock market. It’s a market of stocks.”
“We’re constructive on the market.”
“Stocks are down on ‘profit taking.’”
“The trend is your friend.”
“More buyers than sellers.”
“There’s lots of cash on the sidelines.”
“We’re in a bottoming process.”
“Overbought.”
“Buy on weakness.”
“Take a wait-and-see approach.”
“It’s a show-me stock.”

Are You Doing These 7 Mistakes ?

*  You’re a momentum trader and you’re trading a slow, low volatility market;
*  You’re a trend trader and you’re trading a choppy, range market;
*  You’re a research-oriented big picture trader and you’re getting caught up in short-term price action;
*  You’re a skilled short-term trader and you’re locked in a longer-term directional market view;
*  You’re a contrarian fader and you’re getting run over in high volume directional flows;
*  You’re an independent thinker, but you’re distracted and influenced by the views of others;
*  You’re a trader who reads others well at the table, but you’re isolated from other traders;
A great way to lose money is to not understand yourself and how you’re wired cognitively.  If you’re a deep thinker, you’ll lose money sitting at the trading table.  If you’re a fast thinker, you’ll lose money dabbling with investment theses.  The route to success is to be who you are when you’re functioning at your best.  Working on improving your discipline, controlling your emotions, and following your process is not helpful if you’re sitting at the wrong table to begin with.

Go For the Big Move, Even If You Know Most Moves Are Small

  • Every time you assume a market position in the direction of the major trend, you should premise that the market could have major profit potential and you should play your strategy accordingly. By doing so, you will be encouraged to hold the position and not look for short-term trades.
  • Your perception tells you to hold every with-the-trend position, looking for the big move. Your sense of reality tells you that most trades are not destined for the big move. But, since you don’t know in advance which trade will be wildly successful and since you know that some of them will be, the strategy of choice is to assume each with-the-trend trade can be the ‘big one’; and let your stops take you out of those trades which fizzle.
  • The annals of financial markets are replete with real time examples of markets that started most unimpressively, but then developed into full scale mega-moves. Meanwhile, most of the original participants who may have climbed on board at the very inception of the move, got out at the first profit opportunity and then watched as the market continued to move very substantially, but certainly without them.

Links For Traders

 
Chain Links

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5 Great Things about Great Traders

 Everyone is wrong in the markets at times. The difference between the great traders and the unsuccessful ones is in how long they stay wrong.
* Addictive traders get high from action; great traders get high from mastering markets–and mastering themselves.
* Great traders do their best work when they are not trading; unsuccessful traders do not work when they are not trading.
* Every loss of discipline is a self-betrayal; great traders are true to themselves and stay disciplined as a result.
* Great traders focus on the two things they can always control: when they play and how much they bet. 

Never Ever Follow The Villager Into Equities

It’s a moot point: Is the Buffalo leading the Villager or is the Villager Following The Buffalo? The Chinese are contemplating the same.

Nobody has seen the village chief.

Just months ago, his courtyard home at the edge of the orchard was a makeshift trading floor where local farmers gathered to share tips and track the Shanghai Composite. Now, the gates are closed, a security camera stands watch, and nobody wants to talk about the stock-trading local party secretary.

“Out for the whole day,” ventured a neighbor.

“Who?” said another.

“Maybe he flew away in a plane,” joked a third. The country was gripped by stock fever, a frenzy of borrowing and buying that saw Chinese markets soar to historic heights, drawing in tens of millions of first-time investors, including dozens of people in this northern Chinese village.

The rally was bolstered by rah-rah editorials in the state-controlled press. Invoking President Xi Jinping’s vision for a powerful and prosperous China, the People’s Daily called rising stock prices “carriers of the China dream.” When the benchmark index hit 4000 points, an editorial in the same party flagship promised it was “just the beginning” of the bull run.

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What to Monitor During a Correction

  • Bull market correctionReversed for bear market correction.
    • Support below
    • Fibonacci retracement levels of prior uptrend
    • Bottoming price action
    • Positive divergence — index vs. indicators
    • Positive divergence — index vs. internals
    • Bullish candlestick pattern or western reversal bar
    • Notable change in scan hits
    • Break of resistance (downward sloping) trendline

Classifying Bull Market Declines

  • 1 to 3% – Market pullback
  • 3 to 5% – Minor correction
  • 5 to 8% – Standard correction
  • 8 to 12% – Deep correction
  • 12 to 16% – Very deep correction
  • 16 to 20% – Minor bear market
  • More than 20% – Bear market
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