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Trading Wisdom

WISDOMDo more of what is working for you, and less of what’s not. Each day, look at the various positions you are holding, and try to add to the trade that has the most profit while subtracting from that trade that is either unprofitable or is showing the smallest profit. This is the basis of the old adage, “let your profits run.”

Don’t trade until the technicals and the fundamentals both agree. This rule makes pure technicians cringe. I don’t care! I will not trade until I am sure that the simple technical rules I follow, and my fundamental analyses, are running in tandem. Then I can act with authority, and with certainty, and patiently sit tight.

When sharp losses in equity are experienced, take time off. Close all trades and stop trading for several days. The mind can play games with itself following sharp, quick losses. The urge “to get the money back” is extreme, and should not be given in to.

Five qualities for Successful Traders

secrets_successful_trader

  1. 1)Capacity for Prudent Risk-taking.The young successful trader is not afraid to go after markets aggressively when the opportunity presents itself.
  2. 2)Capacity for Rule Governance. The young successful trader has the self-control to follow rules in the heat of battle, such as rules of position sizing and risk management.
  3. 3)Capacity for Sustained Effort.The trader uses productive time to do research, preparation, work on himself, outside of market hours.
  4. 4)Capacity for Emotional Resilience. All young traders will lose money early in their development and experience multiple frustrations. The successful ones will not lose self-confidence and motivation in the face of loss and frustrations.

5)Capacity for Sound reasoning. The successful young trader exhibits an ability to synthesize data and generate market and trading scenarios.

“Intraday – Instant Gains…Position Calls – Bumper Gains”

ASR-MINTMONEYSo it happened Yesterday as well.  Once NF crossed our Laxman Rekha of 5077, it went to 5139 – our level mentioned in the morning was 5140 !!!! 

Now Look at Instant Gains in Intra-day:  I wrote yesterday morning that above 103  JINDAL COTEX  will shoot upto 109, 111 and could hit circuit too.  It’s a tribute to Technicals, it actually skyrocketed to 120-70. 

 See the precision in day trade.  TULIP went upto 962.50  –  our level was 963, it would have taken off brilliantly only had it crossed.

 Now see the Bumper gains in Position Calls.  I am writing since 1 week about bullishness in AIRLINE Stocks.  All had a rally.  My best pick was KINGFISHER Airlines: Recommended @ Rs.52 on 26th Nov / Thu to buy with a target of 74+ and even 100 too.  The lowest that it can slide to before the rallying was 49.  Mesmerisingly it touched a low of 49-50 in last weeks Dubai debacle only to rally upto 57-10 today.  So far in Just  4 sessions a gain of Rs.30000+ per each F&O Lot of  4250.  Anything else is called Bumper Gain ???

-In Last two sessions enjoyed rally  in DLF ,Unitech ,HDIL or not ?

 Yesterday  on website we have mentioned only 2 stocks.  But to our subscribers:

Manali Petro upperfreeze, CONCOR rallied from 1185 to 1220, Rel Media from 265 to 280 and many others.

 Our Levels pour money in your lap before you could even count.

On Trading Psychology

From “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator” by Edwin Lefevre, the 1923 classic pseudo-autobiography of legendary trader Jesse Livermore:

… I didn’t always win. My plan of trading was sound enough and won oftener than it lost. If I had stuck to it I’d have been right perhaps as often as seven out of ten times. In fact, I always made money when I was sure I was right before I began. What beat me was not having brains enough to stick to my own game — that is, to play the market only when I was satisfied that precedents favored my play. There is a time for all things, but I didn’t know it. And that is precisely what beats so many men in Wall Street who are very far from being in the main sucker class. There is the plain fool, who does the wrong thing at all times everywhere, but there is the Wall Street fool, who thinks he must trade all the time. No man can always have adequate reasons for buying or selling stocks daily — or sufficient knowledge to make his play an intelligent play.

Sometimes the best play is to not play at all. When playing the market, you have to let the opportunities come to you, and take advantage of them when the odds are in your favor. If you don’t, you’ll get very frustrated — and you’ll lose money.

It Would be A Mistake To Think That The Bailout Is Actually A Bailout Of Greece

The ECB has talked more hawkish than the Federal Reserve but basically they are all money printers. Some are better at it, and faster and have more efficient machines the others are slower but basically central banks, they run a print and print.

And it would be a mistake to think that the bailout is actually a bailout of Greece. Greece is a write-off. You can`t have the kind of debt Greece has with Olive Oil income. They have no industries to speak of. They have shipping but the shipping industy does not pay taxes in Greece.

So basically the bailout is actually a bailout of the ECB itself because they already have a lot of paper of Spain, portugal and Greece in their portfolio and a bailout of the banks in Europe. They lent money to Greece, Spain and Portugal, so they are all in the same boat.

10 Market Insights from Mark Douglas

1. The four trading fears

95% of the trading errors you are likely to make will stem from your attitudes about being wrong, losing money, missing out, and leaving money on the table – the four trading fears

2. The proverbial empathy gap

You may already have some awareness of much of what you need to know to be a consistently successful trader. But being aware of something doesn’t automatically make it a functional part of who you are. Awareness is not necessarily a belief. You can’t assume that learning about something new and agreeing with it is the same as believing it at a level where you can act on it.

3. The market doesn’t generate happy or painful information

From the markets perspective, it’s all simply information. It may seem as if the market is causing you to feel the way you do at any given moment, but that’s not the case. It’s your own mental framework that determines how you perceive the information, how you feel, and, as a result, whether or not you are in the most conducive state of mind to spontaneously enter the flow and take advantage of whatever the market is offering.

4. The flaws of fundamental analysis

Fundamental analysis creates what I call a “reality gap” between “what should be” and “what is.” The reality gap makes it extremely difficult to make anything but very long-term predictions that can be difficult to exploit, even if they are correct.

5. A good trader is a confident trader (more…)

Greed and Fear

Greed and Fear are two of the strongest emotions that can have major influences on our trading behaviours and hence profitability.

We have all experienced these, from the inability to put a trade on to the gut ache seeing money on the table evaporate.

Recently I have been thinking of these two emotions in a different light. What I want to propose is that these two emotions have very different “time-frames” of operation, with respect to trading. Now I have
no detailed research or data to back this up, but I felt I’d put this out there and see what other traders thought…

Fear = Short Term = Most likely to be experienced before or soon after a trade is placed.

Greed = Longer Term = Emotion that plays a major role further into the trade timeline.

My rationale here is that it is FEAR that (some) people feel before putting on a trade, worrying if they should place the trade or not, once in a trade it is FEAR that makes them start hoping that it wont go
against them.

With GREED, I think this starts to come in later. For instance, if the position has become profitable, then starts to loose and become negative, it is GREED for the money that was on the table that keeps you
in the trade, not fear of loss. As it usually takes time for the trade to become profitable, the emotion of GREED by association is the emotion that takes longer to materialise. Indeed, I would argue that when
you think back to the trades ‘that could have been’, you are more likely to remember the trades that ‘could have’ made you a good return, rather than the quick losses you took?

Richard Rhodes' Trading Rules

If I’ve learned anything in my decades of trading, I’ve learned that the simple methods work best. Those who need to rely upon complex stochastics, linear weighted moving averages, smoothing techniques, Fibonacci numbers etc., usually find that they have so many things rolling around in their heads that they cannot make a rational decision. One technique says buy; another says sell. Another says sit tight while another says add to the trade. It sounds like a cliche, but simple methods work best.

  1. The first and most important rule is – in bull markets, one is supposed to be long. This may sound obvious, but how many of us have sold the first rally in every bull market, saying that the market has moved too far, too fast. I have before, and I suspect I’ll do it again at some point in the future. Thus, we’ve not enjoyed the profits that should have accrued to us for our initial bullish outlook, but have actually lost money while being short. In a bull market, one can only be long or on the sidelines. Remember, not having a position is a position.
  2. Buy that which is showing strength – sell that which is showing weakness. The public continues to buy when prices have fallen. The professional buys because prices have rallied. This difference may not sound logical, but buying strength works. The rule of survival is not to “buy low, sell high”, but to “buy higher and sell higher”. Furthermore, when comparing various stocks within a group, buy only the strongest and sell the weakest.
  3. When putting on a trade, enter it as if it has the potential to be the biggest trade of the year. Don’t enter a trade until it has been well thought out, a campaign has been devised for adding to the trade, and contingency plans set for exiting the trade.
  4. On minor corrections against the major trend, add to trades. In bull markets, add to the trade on minor corrections back into support levels. In bear markets, add on corrections into resistance. Use the 33-50% corrections level of the previous movement or the proper moving average as a first point in which to add.
  5. Be patient. If a trade is missed, wait for a correction to occur before putting the trade on. (more…)

17 One Liners for Traders

Trade the market, not the money
• Always trade value, never trade price
• The answer to the question, “What’s the trend?” is the question, “What’s your timeframe?”
• Never allow a statistically significant unrealized gain to turn into a statistically significant realized loss (ATR)
• Don’t tug at green shoots
• When there’s nothing to do, do nothing
• Stop adjustments can only be used to reduce risk, not increase it.
• There are only two kinds of losses: big losses and small losses, given these choices – always choose small losses.
•  Don’t Anticipate, Just Participate
• Buy the strongest, sell the weakest (RSI)
• Sideways markets eventually resolve themselves into trending markets and vice versa
• Stagger entries & exits – Regret Minimization techniques
• Look for low risk, high reward, high probability setups
• Correlations are for defense, not offense
• Drawdowns are for underleveraged trading and research
• Develop systems based on the kinds of “pain” (weaknesses) endured when they aren’t working or you’ll abandon them during drawdowns.
• Be disciplined in risk management & flexible in perceiving market behavior

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