“I absolutely believe that price movement patterns are being repeated; they are recurring patterns that appear over and over. This is because the stocks were being driven by humans- and human nature never changes”. -Richard Dennis (Turned 400 dollars into a fortune of at least 200 million dollars by using his remarkable trading skills). |
Archives of “trend trader” tag
rss4 Trading Fears
As Mark Douglas points out in his great book about trading psychology is that the majority of traders lose because of wrong thinking, misplaced emotions, and wanting to be right. We know fear and greed drive the market prices far more than fundamentals do. However fear makes traders do the wrong things at the wrong time. Here are four great examples of fear over ruling sound trading strategies.
Here are more thoughts about these four fears:
The fear of being wrong: Traders fear being wrong so much they will hold a small loss until it becomes a huge loss. Even adding to the loss in the hopes of it coming back and getting to even. Don’t do this, holding on to a loser after it hits your predetermined stop loss is like being a reverse trend trader. Do not be afraid of being wrong small be afraid of being wrong BIG.
The fear of losing money: New traders hate to lose money, they do not quite understand yet that they will lose 40%-60% of the time in the long term. We should come to expect the small losses and wait for the big wins patiently. Many times traders fear this so much that they have a hard time taking an entry out of fear of losing. If you can’t handle the losses as part of the business, you can’t trade.
The fear of missing out: The opposite of the fear of losing money is the fear of losing potential profits. This causes traders to watch a stock go up and up, miss the primary trend, then not being able to take it any more and get in late just in time for the trend to reverse and lose money. Trade at your systems proper entry point do not chase a stock because you are afraid to miss out on some profits.
The fear of leaving money on the table: When your trailing stop is hit get out of the trade. If your rules tell you to get out after a parabolic run up and stall then exit. You must be disciplined on taking money off the table while it is there. Being greedy for that last few dollars when your system says to sell could lead to major losses of paper profits. Let your winners run but when the runner gets to tired to continue: bank your profits.
13 Trading Rules
- Let winners run. While momentum is in phase, the market can run much further than might be expected.
- Corollary to that rule: Do not exit winners without reason!
- Be quick to admit when wrong and get flat.
- Sometimes a time stop is the right solution. If a position is entered, but the anticipated scenario does not develop then get out.
- Remember: if one thing isn’t happening the other thing probably is. Historically, this has never been good for me…
- Be careful of correlations. Several positions can often equal one large position bearing unacceptable risk. Please think.
- I am responsible for risk management, money management, trade management, doing the analytical work and putting on every trade that comes.
- I am not responsible for the outcome of any one trade. Markets are highly random. I do not have a crystal ball. I am not as smart as I think I am.
- Risk management is the first and last responsibility. I can make almost any mistake and be ok as long as I do not violate my risk management parameters.
- Opportunity comes every day. Do not neglect the work. Must do analysis every day.
- Opportunity comes every day. Get out of poor positions. Move on.
- I am a better countertrend trader than a trend trader. Sometimes the crowd is right, and they will run me over at those times if I’m not quick to admit I’m wrong.
- If you’re going to do something stupid, at least do it on smaller size.
Nicholas Darvas: Trend Trader
From a Time Magazine article in 1959:
Darvas places his buy orders for levels that he considers breakout points on the upside. At the same time, he places a stop-loss sell order just below his buy order, so that if the stock does not move straight up after he buys, he will be sold out and his loss cut. “I have no ego in the stock market,” he says. “If I make a mistake I admit it immediately and get out fast.” Darvas thinks his system is the height of conservatism. Says he: “If you could play roulette with the assurance that whenever you bet $100 you could get out for $98 if you lost your bet, wouldn’t you call that good odds?” If he has a big profit in a stock, he puts the stop-loss order just below the level at which a sliding stock should meet support. He bought Universal Controls at 18, sold it at 83 on the way down after it had hit 102. “I never bought a stock at the low or sold one at the high in my life,” says Darvas. “I am satisfied to be along for most of the ride.”
Trading Wisdom-One Liners
- Look at your trading as a series of probabilities, don’t focus on any single profit or loss.
- Want what the market wants.
- Do your homework. Come prepared to each day’s trading.
- Never take a trade on the open in the direction of a that day’s gap.
- Don’t risk too much of your trading capital on any single idea.
- Remain flexible.
- Believe what you see. If the market’s going up or down, it’s going up or down.
- Anything can happen. The wildness lies in wait.
- Verify your trading methods or systems.
- Caveat emptor (“Let the buyer beware.”) when buying a trading system or hiring a mentor.
- Your own personal psychology will express itself regardless of your chosen method.
- An opinion isn’t worth much, your own or someone else’s.
- Watch how the markets react to the news.
- Learn from your mistakes.
- Stay in the now. Don’t trade yesterday, today. Don’t trade tomorrow, today.
- Don’t worry about a missed opportunity. Another one is on the way. Besides there were several that just passed of which you were totally unaware.
- If you don’t risk, you can’t make money. If you lose all your trading capital, you can’t trade. Find balance.
- Markets don’t go in a single direction. The trend will wobble on it’s way to its destination.
- The trend is your friend. Unless you’re a counter trend trader, and then only it’s end is your friend.
- Tomorrow’s another day, a whole new trading opportunity. Be optimistic.
- Forgive yourself. Take the lesson, and move on.
Ten Times When A Trader Should do Nothing
Ten Times When A Trader Should do Nothing
- When you are confused and don’t know what to do, do nothing.
- There are no set ups on your watch list, then don’t trade.
- You are a trend trader and there is no trend to trade.
- The market is extremely volatile due to headline risk.
- You want to make an option trade but the options are illiquid with a huge bid ask spread.
- If you are trying to trade supply and demand but the government keeps interfering with your market, pick a different market.
- Your stock reports earnings the next day and you expect a powerful move but it could easily go either way, wait until after earnings to trade.
- You are a momentum trader but their is not momentum, then wait.
- You play the long side only and the market is in a correction or a bear market, wait for a new trend to the upside.
- If you are not at your best mentally and emotionally then don’t trade until you are.
Time to Read :Trading Rules !
To me, it’s useful to re-read things like this sometimes, just to remind myself of the obvious. I hope you find them useful. (The last rule alone has saved me a lot of money over the years…)
Trade Management
- Let winners run. While momentum is in phase, the market can run much further than might be expected.
- Do not exit winners without reason!
- Be quick to admit when wrong and get flat.
- Sometimes a time stop is the right solution. If a position is entered, but the anticipated scenario does not develop then get out.
- Remember: if one thing isn’t happening the other thing probably is. Historically, this has never been good for me…
- Be careful of correlations. Several positions can often equal one large position bearing unacceptable risk. Please think.
Other thoughts
- I am responsible for risk management, money management, trade management, doing the analytical work and putting on every trade that comes.
- I am not responsible for the outcome of any one trade. Markets are highly random. I do not have a crystal ball. I am not as smart as I think I am.
- Risk management is the first and last responsibility. I can [mess]anything else up and be ok as long as I do not violate my risk management parameters.
- Opportunity comes every day. Do not neglect the work. Must do analysis every day.
- Opportunity comes every day. Get out of [crappy] positions. Move on.
- I am a better countertrend trader than a trend trader. Sometimes the crowd is right, and they will run me over at those times if I’m not quick to admit I’m wrong.
- If you’re going to do something stupid, at least do it on smaller size.
Four Trading Fears
“Ninety-five percent of the trading errors you are likely to make—causing the money to just evaporate before your eyes—will stem from your attitudes about being wrong, losing money, missing out, and leaving money on the table. What I call the four primary trading fears.” -Mark Douglas (Trading int he Zone)
As Mark Douglas points out in his great book about trading psychology is that the majority of traders lose because of wrong thinking, misplaced emotions, and wanting to be right. We know fear and greed drive the market prices far more than fundamentals do. However fear makes traders do the wrong things at the wrong time. Here are four great examples of fear over ruling sound trading strategies.
Here are more thoughts about these four fears:
The fear of being wrong: Traders fear being wrong so much they will hold a small loss until it becomes a huge loss. Even adding to the loss in the hopes of it coming back and getting to even. Don’t do this, holding on to a loser after it hits your predetermined stop loss is like being a reverse trend trader. Do not be afraid of being wrong small be afraid of being wrong BIG.
The fear of losing money: New traders hate to lose money, they do not quite understand yet that they will lose 40%-60% of the time in the long term. We should come to expect the small losses and wait for the big wins patiently. Many times traders fear this so much that they have a hard time taking an entry out of fear of losing. If you can’t handle the losses as part of the business, you can’t trade.
The fear of missing out: The opposite of the fear of losing money is the fear of losing potential profits. This causes traders to watch a stock go up and up, miss the primary trend, then not being able to take it any more and get in late just in time for the trend to reverse and lose money. Trade at your systems proper entry point do not chase a stock because you are afraid to miss out on some profits.
The fear of leaving money on the table: When your trailing stop is hit get out of the trade. If your rules tell you to get out after a parabolic run up and stall then exit. You must be disciplined on taking money off the table while it is there. Being greedy for that last few dollars when your system says to sell could lead to major losses of paper profits. Let your winners run but when the runner gets to tired to continue: bank your profits.
Trading Wisdoms
“I absolutely believe that price movement patterns are being repeated; they are recurring patterns that appear over and over. This is because the stocks were being driven by humans- and human nature never changes”.
-Jesse Livermore (Considered by many to be the greatest stock market operator ever. Made 100 million dollars in 1929 stock market crash. Made several other multi-million dollar fortunes in his trading career).
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“You have to cut your losses fast. The secret for winning in the stock market does not include being right all the time. The key is to lose the least amount possible when you are wrong”.
-William J. O’Neil (In my opinion, the best stock market operator in the world today. Has made an incredible fortune trading the stock market. O’Neil is the founder of Investors Business Daily. Much of my stock market education and training has been from William J. O’Neil).
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“Whatever method you use to enter a trade, the most critical thing is that if there is a major trend, your approach should assure that you get in that trend”.
-Richard Dennis (Turned 400 dollars into a fortune of at least 200 million dollars by using his remarkable trading skills).
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“I am primarily a trend trader. In order of importance to me are: (1) the long-term trend, (2) the current chart pattern, and (3) picking a good spot to buy or sell”.
-Ed Seykota (One of the greatest traders of all time. Turned 5000 dollars into an incredible 15 million dollars or more).
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“The most important rule of trading is to play great defense”.
-Paul Tudor Jones (An amazingly consistent and successful trader. In 2006, earned a whopping 750 million dollars).
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“Being right 3 or 4 times out of 10 should yield a person a fortune if he has the sense to cut his losses quickly on the ventures where he has been wrong”.
-Bernard Baruch (Fantastic trader who earned ten’s of millions of dollars in the first part of the 20th century).
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“The greatest safety lies in putting all your eggs in one basket and watching that basket”.
-Gerald M. Loeb (Amassed many millions in the stock market during his long career).
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“I am looking for the strongest stocks in the market, in terms of both earnings and the technical picture”
-David Ryan (Multiple time winner in the stock division of the U.S. Investing Championships).
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“Most of my success has been due to my hanging on while my profits mounted. There is the big secret”.
-Arthur W. Cutten (Gained wealth and prominence, early in the 20th century, as a commodity trader, mostly in the wheat market.
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“I think the secret is cutting down the number of trades you make. The best trades are the ones in which you have all three things going for you: fundamentals, technicals, and market tone”.
– Michael Marcus (In a ten-year period, he multipled his company account by an incredible 2500 times).
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“Whenever I enter a position, I have a predetermined stop. I know where I’m getting out before I get in”.
-Bruce Kovner (One of the world’s largest traders in the 1980’s. Made profits of over 300 million trading for himself).
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“I try to assemble facts and decide what kind of scenario I think will unfold”.
-Bill Lipschutz (One of the most successful currency traders ever).
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“Virtually every successful trader I know ultimately ended up with a trading style suited to his personality”.
-Randy McKay (Turned $2000 into $70,000 his first year of trading. Went on to double digit million dollar gains).
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“The biggest misconception is the widespread belief that it is easy to make a living trading in the stock market”.
-Stuart Walton (Fantastic stock trading track record in the 1990’s).
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“If you decide to trade for a living, you have to treat it just like any other business endeavor and go into it with a plan”.
-Mark D. Cook (Great annual returns trading the markets).
10 Rules for Traders
Never add too a losing trade. In adding to a losing trade you are already wrong but now become more wrong with a bigger trading size. Adding to losers makes you a counter trend trader that usually ends badly.
- Never lose more than 1% to 2% of your trading capital on any one trade. This means use position sizing and stop losses so when you are wrong the loss is not a big deal.
- Never trade anything you do not understand 100%. Stay away from trading futures, forex, or options until you understand the risk and how exactly they work.
- Always trade with the trend in your own time frame.
- Only look for low risk, high reward, high probability setups , when there is nothing to trade, trade nothing.
- Trade the chart and price action, not your own opinions or predictions.
- You have to trade your own way, the trading style that you are comfortable with that fits you.
- If you do not have a full trading plan with rules on entries, exits and risk management stop trading until you create one.
- The size of your wins and losses ultimately determine your trading success regardless of your winning percentage.
Your risk management rules will ultimately determine the success of your technical trading system.