Think for myself
- Stay focused on the reasons why I bought a stock and sell when those reasons are no longer compelling
- Don’t let successful trades turn into losses
- Be ruled less by emotion and fear and more by logic and knowledge
- Read some good books on trading
- To avoid being whipsawed, I will give myself more room for the trade to work
- Follow my own rules
- Be easier on myself when I screw up and don’t let my ego inflate when I’m right
- Don’t force trades – there will always be another opportunity
- Honor thy stops!
- Stop chasing hot and popular stocks
- Do my own research
- Keep learning
- Learn to be less nervous and take more risks
- Remember that lost opportunity is better than lost capital
- Trade less – don’t overtrade
- To try and limit the number of opinions I allow to affect my trading. Paralysis by analysis has hurt me
- Avoid any trade where I use the word “hope” in my reasoning process
- To follow my logical, well-conceived, long-term game plan, without making irrational changes due to short-term market conditions
- Tune out the daily noise and useless banter
- Reduce the number of positions currently held
- Have more faith in my own abilities
- In trading, learn to be fearless
- Don’t be too greedy
- Slow down!
- Incorporate the use of smart trailing stops
- Use ETFs to properly diversify
- Remove my ego from my trading decisions
- Avoid getting easily frustrated or impatient
- Control and limit my losses
- Focus on making the next trade, instead of the last one
- I will not average down into losing positions
- Create more careful and detailed records with a commitment to review them regularly
- Learn to incorporate a systematic screening method like you
- Use emotions (both personal and market) to my own advantage
- Know my exits before making any trade
- Don’t be swayed by the latest and greatest strategy I hear about
- Keep it simple. Complex strategies are no better
- Avoid crowded trades
- Take time to look for reasons NOT to buy
- Let profits run longer. take losses quicker
- Trade what I see, not what I want to see
- Be more proactive and react faster to situations I find
- Make bigger, but less frequent trades
- Stay patient
- Focus on value of companies and not on the temporary market emotions
- Be more nimble
- Keep better notes
- Adopt an opportunistic versus a rigid bull or bear bias toward the market
- Enjoy the game more
- To quit counting the value of my account on a daily basis
- Stop looking for the holy grail
- Figure out what trade related information to consume on a daily basis and keep what is useful and leave out that which is not
- Avoid information overload by limiting what I read
- Don’t read stock blogs
- Turn off the TV and dedicate more of my time to become a better trader
- Set up a lazy portfolio
- Focus on proper asset allocation
- Never forget that “when you are through learning you are through”
- Recognize mistakes early, exit, and move on
- Take partial profits routinely, but keep money on high-performing stocks
- Follow my system
- To screen & scan my watchlist in a consistent manner each and every time
- Take routine breaks away from the market to refresh and gain more perspective
- Add more fundamental research to my technical research
- Concentrate on finding just one really good idea per year like Warren Buffett
- Stop searching for shortcuts or quick fixes – take baby steps
- Read at least 3 more trading books in next 3 months
- Focus, focus, focus – ignore all outside distractions
- When a strategy works, have the courage to follow it through, when it does not work, to have the wisdom to stop trading
- Find and exploit long-range sector themes
- Open my ears and keep my mouth shut
- Never panic
- Be humble
Archives of “game plan” tag
rssPrinciples of Peak Performance
The first principle of peak performance is to put fun and passion first. Get the performance pressures out of your head. Forget about statistics, percentage returns, win/loss ratios, etc. Floor-traders scratch dozens of trades during the course of a day, but all that matters is whether they’re up at the end of the month.
Don’t think about TRYING to win the game – that goes for any sport or performance-oriented discipline. Stay involved in the process, the technique, the moment, the proverbial here and now.! A trader must concentrate on the present price action of the market. A good analogy is a professional tennis player who focuses only on the point at hand. He’ll probably lose half the points he plays, but he doesn’t allow himself to worry about whether or not he’s down a set. He must have confidence that by concentrating on the techniques he’s worked on in practice, the strengths in his game will prevail and he will be able to outlast his opponent.
The second principle of peak performance is confidence. in yourself, your methodology, and your ability to succeed. Some people are naturally born confident. Other people are able to translate success from another area in their life. Perhaps they were good in sports, music, or academics growing up. There’s also the old-fashioned “hard work” way of getting confidence. Begin by researching and developing different systems or methodologies. Put in the hours of backtesting. Tweak and modify the systems so as to make them your own. Study the charts until you’ve memorized every significant swing high or low. Self-confidence comes from developing a methodology that YOU believe in. (more…)
Two Trading Plan for Traders
The Trading Plan comes first and should account for the following parameters: 1. Entering a trade. 2. Exiting a trade. 3. Stop Placement. 4. Position Sizing. 5. Money Management. 6. What to Trade. 7. Trading Time Frames. 8. Back Testing. 9. Performance Review. 10. Risk vs. Reward. The Game Plan consists of putting the parameters of the Trading Plan to work in day to day trading with the following benefits: 1. It will force the trader to select a trading style. 2. It will encourage market study. 3. It will aide in helping pick the correct trades. 4. It will prepare the trader for what the market has to offer. 5. It will help in properly monitoring and exiting trades. 6. It will keep the trader from overtrading. 7. It will help with finances. 8. It will keep the trader focused. 9. It will take the gambling out of trading. 10. It will make a better trader out of you. |
Knowledge
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How to Stay Objective in your Trades
1. Acknowledge that you have lost objectivity. Now that you are aware of the problem, you can begin to deal with it.
2. Remove yourself from the day-to-day noise and write down what your original thesis was. Clearing off your mirrors will tell you what direction you are moving.
3. Begin to Think Backwards by creating three columns with the following headings (Support, Do Not Support, Undecided). This will force you to Objectively lay out and evaluate the situation.
4. Talk to yourself: “Based on the data points I wrote down in each column, if I did not have a position on, what would I do?” Asking yourself this question forces you re-evaluate the trade from an unbiased perspective.
5. Compare your response with your original position/thesis to create a WIN-WIN (more…)
8 Things Really Successful People Do
1. Make Materialism Irrelevant
Fancy cars and houses are all well and good, but many foolishly focus on the byproducts of success, rather than concentrating on building sustainable success in the first place. Establish a bare minimum for your material needs, and then you can enjoy the benefits of success, debt- and stress-free.
2. Enhance Knowledge
Success comes faster to those who are open, active learners. The higher up the success ladder you climb, the more complex the systems and opportunities that are presented to you. Absorb all the information you can and if you sense a gap you can’t fill, connect with people who have the knowledge you need. (more…)
The Zen of Trading
This is the “Zen of Trading;” It is more than an overview — it’s an investment philosophy that can help you develop an investing framework of your own.
1. Have a Comprehensive Plan: Whether you are an investor or active trader, you must have a plan. Too many investors have no strategy at all — they merely react to each twitch of the market on the fly. If you fail to plan, goes the saying, then you plan to fail.
Consider how Roger Clemens approaches a game. He studies his opponent, constructs his game plan and goes to work.
Investors should write up a business plan, as if they were asking a Venture Capitalist for start-up money; just because you are the angel investor doesn’t mean you should skip the planning stages.
2. Expect to Be Wrong: We’ve discussed this previously, but it is such a key aspect of successful investing that it bears repeating. You will be wrong, you will be wrong often and, occasionally, you will be spectacularly wrong.
Michael Jordan has a fabulous perspective on the subject: “I’ve missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. Twenty six times, I’ve been trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”
Jordan was the greatest ball player of all time, and not only because of his superb physical skills: He understood the nature and importance of failure, and placed it appropriately within a larger framework of the game.
The best investors have no ego tied up in a trade. Those who refuse to recognize the simple truism of “being wrong often” end up giving away unacceptable amounts of capital. Stubborn pride and lack of risk management allow egotists to stay in stocks down 30%, 40% or 50% — or worse.
3. Predetermine Stops Before Opening Any Position: Sign a “prenuptial agreement” with every stock you participate in: When it hits some point you have determined before you purchased it, that’s it, you’re out, end of story. Once you have come to understand that you will be frequently wrong, it becomes much easier to use stop-losses and sell targets.
This is true regardless of your methodology: It may be below support or beneath a moving average, or perhaps you prefer a specific percentage amount. Some people use the prior month’s low. But whatever your stop-loss method is, stick to it religiously. Why? The prenup means you are making the exit decision before you are in a trade — while you are still neutral and objective.
4. Follow Discipline Religiously: The greatest rules in the world are worthless if you do not have the personal discipline to see them through. I can recall every single time I broke a trading rule of my own, and it invariably cost me money.
RealMoney’s Chartman, Gary B. Smith, slavishly follows his discipline, and he notes that every time some hedge fund — chock full of Nobel Laureates and Ivy League whiz kids — blows up, the mea culpa is the same: If only we hadn’t overrode the system.
In Jack Schwager’s seminal book Market Wizards, the single most important theme repeated by each of the wizards was the importance of discipline. (more…)
Always Ask Yourself
Always Ask Yourself:
Am I emotional today?
While in a trade, talk to yourself out loud:
Am i getting greedy?
Am i desperate?
Am i over trading?
Is this position too big?
Am i cheer leading a position?
Am I following the game plan?
Am i in control of the trade parameters or is this trade controlling me?
Ask yourself out loud and the smart trader will give you the answers.
Gann’s 11 Rules of Success
Our Favourite is number 6
Rule #1 : Strive for Success
To be successful the most important rule is to strive for success. This means you must exert effort and put a lot of hard work into your effort. You must have both the short term and long term charts necessary for trading the markets you trade. They must be always up-to-date and you need to watch them on a daily basis so your mind gets use to their price and time movement. You will then learn the secret of trading and see how the entire price movement continually evolves.
Rule #2: No One Owes You Anything
You must succeed on your own. It is all up to you. The markets, stockbrokers, brokerage firms, news letters don’t owe you anything. Gann never took anyone’s newsletter. He did it all himself. The markets are there to provide you a service for buying and selling the markets you are trading. They really don’t care that you make money. The markets are there for the brokerage fees. The more you trade, the more money the brokerage firms and exchanges make. You must be knowledgeable of a reliable trading method that you can use to extract money from these markets. This method must be able to help you understand the price structure of the markets in regards to time and price movement.
Rule #3: Plan You’re Way to Profit
when you enter a trade you should have a figured a game plan for both the entry and exit of the trade. The plan should be definite and not subject to changes to your psychology during market hours. Gann knew exactly what he was doing all the time. You should have a stop in the market at all times, because you never know when a time cycle might turn against you. You should also have a profit objective in the market. So many traders today lose because they are using computer oscillators to trade with and they never know where they are going. They usually end up on trading with rumors and tips and use hope and fear to try to make a success of the markets. (more…)
Look at trading like a pie chart
- Risk Management: Stop loss, profit target, Risk / Reward, and position sizing.
- Trading Game Plan: expectations for the next session, Levels of Interest, and intraday tape reading.
- Psychological Health: Staying positive and keeping your head.