-The market pays you to be disciplined.
-Be disciplined every day, in every trade, and the market will reward you. But don’t
claim to be disciplined if you are not 100 percent of the time.
-Always lower your trade size when you’re trading poorly.
-Never turn a winner into a loser.
-Your biggest loser can?t exceed your biggest winner.
-Develop a methodology and stick with it. don?t change methodologies from day to
day.
-Be yourself. Don?t try to be someone else.
-You always want to be able to come back and play the next day. Once you reach
the daily downside limit, you must turn your PC off and call it a day. You can always come back tomorrow.
-Earn the right to trade bigger. Remember: if you are trading poorly with two lots you
must lower your trade size down to a one lot.
-Get out of your losers.
-The first loss is the best loss.
-Don?t hope and pray. If you do, you will lose.
-don?t worry about news. it?s history.
-Don?t speculate. if you do, you will lose.
-Love to lose money. What I mean is to accept the fact that you are going to have
losing trades throughout the trading session. Get out of your losers quickly. Love to get out of your losers quickly.
-If your trade is not going anywhere in a given timeframe, it?s time to exit.
-Never take a big loss. Only a big loss can hurt you. consistency builds confidence and control.
-Learn to sweat out (scale out) your winners.
-Make the same type of trades over and over again ? be a bricklayer.
don?t over-analyze. don?t procrastinate. don?t hesitate. if you do, you will lose.
all traders are created equal in the eyes of the market.
-It?s the market itself that wields the ultimate scale of justice.
Archives of “little bit” tag
rss7 Points for Traders
- You don’t choose the stock market; it chooses you. A little bit of early trading success can have a profound effect on a person’s soul. If it does choose you, you’ll have to accept that your life and investing will become forever connected.
- Your methodology must provide an unshakeable foundation that you believe in totally, and you must have the conviction to trade based upon it. If your belief is tentative or if you don’t have complete faith in your methodology, then a few bad trades will destabilize and erode your confidence.
- A calm mindset that can focus on the execution and not on the outcome is what produces profits. It takes total emotional control. You must maintain your balance, rhythm and patience. You need all three to stay in the game.
- The markets are always conniving with ingenious techniques to get you to lose your patience, to get you frustrated or mad, to bait you to do the wrong thing when you know you shouldn’t. A champion doesn’t allow the markets to get under his skin and take him out of his game.
- Like a great painting, all good trades start with a blank canvas. Winning traders first paint the trade in their mind’s eye so that their emotional selves can reproduce it accurately with clarity and consistency, void of emotions as they play it out in the markets.
- The “here and now” is all that matters. You can’t think about the last trade or the last shot or worry about the future. You need to put on your “amnesia hat” in order to remain completely unfazed by what came before. Only by doing so can you be totally absorbed in executing your present trade.
- Being prepared and having put in the work results in the bringing together of your intuition and confidence. The two go hand in hand. Extraordinary results can be expected when you are able to see it, feel it and trust it.
16 Rules for Thirsty Traders
I always liked these rules for their simplicity and I think they can benefit some of you, if only in the form of a gentle reminder of what you should be doing…or not doing.
1. Market direction is the most important thing in determining a stock’s
probable direction.
2. Price and Volume action are more important than a jillion indicators and
complex theories, no matter how cool they may be.
3. Don’t miss the forest (broad market) for the trees (individual stocks).
4. Don’t anticipate. Wait for confirmation.
5. Don’t trade contrary to the market’s direction.
6. Don’t try to “outsmart” the market.
7. Things can go much, MUCH further than you think they can, in either
direction.
8. Divergences work best with double tops and double bottoms.
9. Quite often, divergence analysis doesn’t work at all. When that happens, it
means the prevailing trend is very strong.
10. You need to effectively filter or limit the amount of data or charts to look
at; otherwise, you will spread yourself way too thin. You must have the time and
alertness to keep your eye on the ball…..hard to do, when you are juggling
thousands.
11. Don’t focus on every tick of each trade. If you are, you are holding on to
the handlebars too tight.
12. Have a plan. Set stops and targets. Don’t be afraid to take 1/2 profits and
raise (or lower) your stops. If your trade follows your script, great. If it
doesn’t within a reasonable time, consider getting out.
13. That said, it’s OK to give your trade a little time, unless you are clearly
wrong. You are often ahead of the market a little bit.
14. You will lose money sometimes. Every trader does. It’s a business, not a
personal indictment against you. Get over it and move on to the next trade.
15. Political opinion and markets do not mix.
16. Learn from your mistakes, or you will be condemned to repeat them.
Deadly Emotions
REVENGE, we all know it and have done it. It happens when you are tricked by the market and decide to take another trade before looking at the big picture, then BAM you are on the wrong side of the trade again. Pissed off and refusing to move while your money is going further down the drain. Scared to let go for fear that you are going to get tricked again.
PANIC, that is when you lack the confidence to enter or ride a profitable trade. This happens when you have taken some hits and now you lack the confidence to trade profitably.
IMPATIENCE, this happens when you can’t wait for a proper trade set-up and jump on a price hiccup/retracement, often finding yourself on the wrong side of the trade.
ANGER, you know that feeling that comes over you when you have taken a hit or two and you want to kill your computer.
SELF PITY, when you come to the market hoping for crumbs and get none, and can’t see why THEY won’t let you have just a little bit.
DEPRESSION, something perhaps outside of the market has you at an extreme low point.
INDIFFERENCE, it happens when you have gotten hit so many times that you just don’t care any more because no matter what you can win any way.
All of these emotions work hard against you clouding your clarity and give other traders the advantage over you.
If you are experiencing any of these emotions when you enter your platform; abandon your trading until you have yourself under control and have the clarity of mind to trade. Not doing so greatly increases your chances of handing your money over to a trader who is more emotionally fit and controlled than you are.
We are all human and it happens to us all, but what weighs heavy in your mind will often weigh heavily in your pocket.
Come to your trading platform, well rested, focused and ready to trade. You may take an occasional hit so what it is a LESSON. We all get them and if we learn the lesson that the loss has taught us; it will make us much better traders.
DO NOT TRADE YOUR EMOTIONS!!!!!—-
“A Little Bit More”
The most successful people in any area of life seem to do what most others also do, but then they do “A Little bit More”.
In trading, many of our friends and associates who do not trade will try and convince us to quit.
This is mainly because they have found that they cannot do what you do. Don’t allow this to change your goals. Keep on doing what it takes..
Trading and alpine climbing
“To climb mountains is to make decisions…. Good decisions are contextual, based on actual circumstances, and cannot be reduced to a set of rules…. In fact rules, guidelines, and codes, although useful for introducing concepts, ultimately become counterproductive when it comes to actually making choices… The simplest climb involves circumstances far too complex to be adequately addressed by rules. The mountain environment itself forces you to rely on your own skills of observation, your understanding of what you observe, and an accurate assessment of risks and of your own abilities.”
The authors continue: “Rules must be replaced by that mysterious quality called judgment. The acquisition of judgment begins with a mountaineer’s very first climb and continues throughout the climber’s entire career. It is a process that cannot be bypassed nor ever be considered complete.”
Principles that help guide decision making are:
Anticipate changes. “Continually look forward. Every change in terrain, route difficulty, or hazard may require a new strategy, mode of movement, or protective system to deal with new circumstances.” (p. 15)
Keep options open. “Any given decision can either maximize or limit other possible options in the future.”
Analyze benefits and costs. “Addressing one risk or solving one problem often entails introducing other risks or aggravating other problems.”
Maintain momentum. “Staying focused on forward movement means always being a little bit stressed, but in such a potentially dangerous environment, some level of stress is, arguably, appropriate.”
Gather information. “Preparing ahead of time will give you a head start…. Above all, remember what you see. Every glimpse is a new piece of the puzzle.”
Recognize and correct errors. “Rather than expecting perfection, strive to recognize errors as early as possible, and take steps to correct the situation. Do not carry on blindly, hoping that everything will work out. Denial causes delay, piling error upon error until only good luck can prevent things from spiraling out of control.” (p. 16)
Assess your own skill and knowledge. “An honest and dispassionate self-critique is indispensable. For example, the capacity to observe, predict, and respond to cues improves over time, just as movement skills and climbing ability improve with practice; but on the other hand, competence can be degraded temporarily by states such as fear or fatigue or by inadequate information and inaccurate perception.” (p. 17)
Alpine climbers take on considerably more risk than traders. After all, traders lose only money; climbers can lose their lives. But the way to the top demands similar decision-making processes.
7 Crucial Points for Traders
- You don’t choose the stock market; it chooses you. A little bit of early trading success can have a profound effect on a person’s soul. If it does choose you, you’ll have to accept that your life and investing will become forever connected.
- Your methodology must provide an unshakeable foundation that you believe in totally, and you must have the conviction to trade based upon it. If your belief is tentative or if you don’t have complete faith in your methodology, then a few bad trades will destabilize and erode your confidence.
- A calm mindset that can focus on the execution and not on the outcome is what produces profits. It takes total emotional control. You must maintain your balance, rhythm and patience. You need all three to stay in the game.
- The markets are always conniving with ingenious techniques to get you to lose your patience, to get you frustrated or mad, to bait you to do the wrong thing when you know you shouldn’t. A champion doesn’t allow the markets to get under his skin and take him out of his game.
- Like a great painting, all good trades start with a blank canvas. Winning traders first paint the trade in their mind’s eye so that their emotional selves can reproduce it accurately with clarity and consistency, void of emotions as they play it out in the markets. (more…)
5 Thoughts for Traders-Must Read
1. We want all trades to be winners. The foolproof system for trading profits is attractive and the seller of such systems can be convincing, yet the profits are elusive. The market could care less about our system, a past trading record, or the trading record of the one selling the system. You do know that the market’s attorney requires that the following be posted in a prominent place…like on our foreheads beside the big L sign!: “Past results are not indicative of future returns.” By the way, the market says, “you’re doing it wrong”.
2. We want to add to losers. The last time I checked the only reason we add to a loser is when the discussion is about our weight! Get on the scales and add up more losing pounds! Be the BIGGEST LOSER! The market, however, says the way to tip the scales in our favor is to add to the winners and lighten up on the losers. To do otherwise is to “do it wrong”.
3. We want to be right. Two wrongs don’t make a right in life but in the stock market two wrongs (and plenty more) will help you get on the right road to making money. The market says the trading game is about making money not about stroking the ego. The “right” road is the “wrong” road when your on Wall Street. Hey, if you doing it to be right, then you’re “doing it wrong!” (more…)