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Ten Ingredients to become A Great Trader

It is all a game of risk management, mind, and a robust system. Everything else is just noise. 

  1. Passion for trading, only passion can fuel the work ethic needed to do the hard work that leads to success.
  2. Goal oriented traders succeed, if you know why you are trading and where it leads you may just get there.
  3. Perseverance: It is hard to lose if you never quit.
  4. Resiliency: The ability to come back from losses may be the secret to trading success.
  5. Back testing systems and methods before trading them speeds up the learning curve and side steps a lot of learning through real losses. (more…)

Four Stages Of Awareness in Trading

awareness

Have you ever noticed that awareness is the first step toward future growth? If you
want to improve in any area, read on below to understand the four stages of
awareness as they relate to good trading.

The learning curve in any endeavor involves four stages:

Unconscious incompetence (where the trader has no idea how much he doesn’t
know about trading)
Conscious incompetence (where the traders realizes after initial losses that he has a
lot to learn)
Conscious competence (where the trader has developed and is now doing well as
long as he works his system and its rules)
Unconscious competence (where the trader has mastered the rules and also knows
when to break the rules as conditions change, in a complete flow with the markets
based on great experience)

Consistency is the Key

Consistency is an essential component for a successful trading career. This is how you achieve confidence and become comfortable with “riding a trading bike”.

Psychological comfort is the key to a long term trading career and is achieved by becoming consistent with small profits. If you can make consistent $ per day: it can be increased drastically within a year and become exponential in long term.

When I hear from students that their goal is ”to make a lot of money“, I always emphasize that there are few essential steps that must be achieved prior : building confidence by achieving consistency with small lot size is the step that cannot be skipped. (more…)

Cutting losses

cuttingloss

There is one big difference between traders, who make money and traders who don’t. It is called risk management. Even if you blindly pick your stocks, in the long-term you will make money as long as you cut your losses short. Add to risk management a proper equity selection model and then you are in top 5% in the world. The 5% that actually make money, consistently. This is the biggest secret of successful traders – cutting losses short. It saves capital and it saves your piece of mind.

If you browse on the internet, you will find thousands of articles that preach that losses should be cut short. It is well known fact and yet you’ll be surprised how few people actually utilize it, even those who write about it. Words are free. You can say whatever you want. Many people don’t practice what they preach and this is why the biggest edge someone could have is called discipline.

There are two types of traders: the ones that cut losses short and the ones that lose everything and go out of business. If you can’t define your risk in advance and most importantly if you can’t accept it, you should not be trading at all. Reading about cutting losses short will never be enough. It is human to believe that you are different and that you know better and that it will never happen to you. You have to experience it to realize it. It is part of the learning curve. I knew about this rule long before I committed serious money to trading and yet I didn’t practice it until I had my portion of outsized losses. Today, the thought of how and where I’ll exit a trade, is the most important.

I know that there are many people who preach that they don’t use stop losses and yet they are successful. Well, if they are successful doing that, then they are not really traders. They are investors and they limit their risk by hedging, which is a whole new chapter.

20 Reasons :Why 95% Traders Not Making Money

  1. They risk too much to try to make so little.
  2. They trade with the probabilities against them.
  3. They think trading is easy money.
  4. Instead of focusing on learning how to trade they focus on getting rich.
  5. They blow up due to improper position sizing.
  6. With no understanding of the mathematical risk of ruin they are doomed after the first long string of losing trades.
  7. Blindly following a guru that leads them down the road of destruction.
  8. They don’t do their homework.
  9. They trade opinions not robust systems. (more…)