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1. There is no magical mathematical system
that will consistently make money in the markets. All mechanical
trading systems experience periods of profit, and periods of
losses. I've seen reports of the best trading systems having
winning trades on average only 48% of the time.
Winning 60% of the
time is considered spectacular for mechanical systems. Most
people lose money on trading systems, this is because they quit
during a string of losses. If you follow a blind system, you
have to stick with it, even during bad times; this can require
deep pockets. Most people cannot do that, so trying to buy a
"successful system" is futile for most people. For discretionary
traders, there are also no magical indicators, which generate
good signals all the time. The trader must learn to know when an
indicator should be followed, and when it should be ignored.
Advice: Some
people are far better suited to mechanical systems trading than
discretionary trading. It requires complete confidence in the
system, and suppression of emotions, the trader must execute
every signal. If you are not such a trader, don't waste your
money on these systems/indicators, instead add the money you
would have spent on such systems to your trading capital.
2.
Discretionary trading can be very rewarding. But it is hard
work, and can also be very stressful. Finding a
style/methodology that suits your personality is difficult, and
many people lose a lot of money in the process of finding one.
Don't expect the first book/methodology you buy to be the magic
one. Finding/developing a good system for your personality is
possible, but not easy. Even when you reach a degree of comfort
with your style, the learning process never ends. Trading is not
a low-stress easy occupation.
Advice: the
best discretionary traders tend to have firm rules and strict
methodologies in place (almost mechanical in many respects). In
order to trade with consistency, they design a system that
actually reduces the amount of discretion in their trading, but
they retain input in key areas of their plan.
3. Backtesting and paper trading are valuable tools (and
abused concepts).
A system/methodology that looks good in a back-test or in paper
trading may not do well in real trading. Back testing and paper
trading are valuable tools. I paper-trade every new concept
before committing capital to the idea. Backtesting and paper
trading allows testing in a risk-free environment, can help you
refine your techniques, encourage discipline, and save you a lot
of pain/losses during the testing/educational cycle. But
Backtesting/paper-trading is not trading. During a paper-trading
exercise, your focus is on testing for success.
During real trading, your focus is often on preventing loss.
Emotions come into play during real trading; no amount of paper
trading can cater to this reality. Backtesting in the futures
arena usually involves "back-adjusted" continuous contracts.
These adjusted
continuous contracts do not represent real prices, or a real
trading environment accurately. All backtesting results should
be treated appropriately. Also, most backtesting exercises
dramatically underestimate trading costs and slippage.
Advice: Ask
for a documented real trading performance history when reviewing
mechanical trading systems. Then determine if the results are
compatible with your objectives and personality. If real trading
results are not available, you must determine if the system
tester used an appropriate means of testing, as well as generous
amounts for trading costs and slippage. Requesting documented
results is not appropriate for discretionary methodologies
because your own personality will affect the outcome.
4. How to dramatically reduce your trading costs.
The real cost of trading is very high. Commission costs are the
least you should be concerned about. Slippage will be
dramatically higher than you think. Most trading
systems/methodologies will have you buying into an existing
trend, and selling (or attempting to) into a price-decline or
panic. Slippage can be horrendous in these circumstances.
Most backtesting
results dramatically underestimate slippage costs. There are
other costs too, add commissions, slippage, computer equipment,
quote service, software, communication costs, loss of interest
on your trading capital, the cost of losing trades (lost
capital), the cost of your learning process (those mistakes you
made). Do you get the idea? Forget about commission costs, don't
quibble about the cost of books or courses, get ready to spend
some real money if you want to trade well.
Consider the
emotional cost. How would you feel after losing 30 percent of
your capital? Would you continue trading in that case? How would
you feel after 4 losses in a row? How about 5 losses in a row,
with your spouse consistently saying, "I told you so"? This
serves to explain the concept of "emotional capital". The
beginner trader needs to find a system/methodology that reduces
both financial and emotional costs.
Advice: look
for a system that helps you buy dips in an uptrend, sell rallies
instead of selling into a down-turn, provided that your
personality can accommodate this style, of course. If you can't
handle a series of consecutive losses, tend towards
discretionary trading (as opposed to mechanical) or consider
earning a living in a different industry.
5.
Almost all the successful traders I've met have suffered severe
losses before they became successful. This means that you will
most likely reach a point at which you have lost so much of your
starting capital that you consider yourself a failure, before
you succeed. Your initial capital will probably be insufficient
to carry you through this process. Start accumulating more
trading capital now. Your first objective is to make your
trading capital last through the learning process. Most people
do not meet this test. You will therefore probably require more
capital than you anticipate.
Advice: On the
other hand, starting small is a great way to reduce your risk,
learn to trade with smaller positions and build up some
confidence, before you enter a more demanding environment. Most
traders do start small, because it makes sense. But you will
probably not become wealthy on only $5,000.
6. It can be done.
I know several people who have become successful at trading.
Read published interviews of these traders. Yes, it can be done!
All of the traders I know do not consider it an easy stress-free
source of instant riches. They treat it as a serious business
because they are trading with real money. Some of the best
traders burn out periodically, and need to take a break.
Advice:
Successful traders tend to strive for balance. They do not trade
all day every day, and then study charts after hours. And then
take a few trades in the after-market, and talk trading all
their waking hours, etc. Most successful traders tend to have a
balanced lifestyle with varied interests. Some have other
businesses; many obtain revenue from training other traders,
selling systems etc. Good traders need to counter the stress of
trading in healthy ways. Trading is a psychological adventure,
manage your mind and emotions. Take vacations regularly, and get
physical exercise, in order to fight stress and burnout.
7. Following someone else's advice most often leads to
failure.
A newsletter subscription will not bring you easy riches. It is
very difficult to trade on someone else' advice. You will not
have the same degree of confidence in each trade as the advisor
does, you do not have the same floor connections, your slippage
will vary, and you may close the trade inappropriately due to
fear.
Advice: Guru's
are great for education. If the advisory service has good and
practical educational content, it could be worth the
subscription, but following someone else blindly usually fails.
8. Locals and specialists are not "out to get you".
This section only applies only to the trading of liquid
instruments. (Do not trade any other kind!) Locals and
specialists do not "gun for your stop", unless it is within easy
reach and in an area where many stops reside. There are many
stops at different prices in the market at any time, if your
stop is located inappropriately, your stop will likely get hit.
This is not the fault of the locals, it is your responsibility
to place your stops appropriately. Yes, locals will try to trade
in an area of clustered stops, but only if the equilibrium of
buyers and sellers
permits it to happen.
Locals have a
privileged position, being able to profit from the spread
between the bid and ask. Too many traders think this is an
unfair condition. It can be unfair if the spread is manipulated.
But bear in mind that the locals assist in creating an orderly
market. They provide liquidity, they take the other side of your
trade. Locals take risks every day that you would not be
comfortable with. Don't begrudge them their ability to trade the
spread. It is to your benefit, and you would not do it for the
same benefit. Think of working hours each day in a very loud
sweaty pit with these aggressive sharks. Better them than me!
Recognize that we benefit from their activities.
Advice: Visit
an exchange, spend some time there. Even find employment at an
exchange, if possible. Try to befriend a local, you will learn a
lot! Too many people trade with a very limited knowledge of
market mechanics. Knowing how the "locals" exploit their edge is
valuable, you can make money with that information (this is
particularly valuable to the day trader).
9. Take responsibility. It is OK to be wrong, you will
make losing trades.
You cannot control the markets, in trading there is much beyond
your control. You can only control yourself and your actions.
Take responsibility for your own actions. Don't blame your
broker, your software, your quote service, or the leader of any
country. It is YOU who makes each trade. If you have a losing
trade because you were bumped into it because of a bad price
tick, tough! You made the trade. The more you take
responsibility, the better trader you will be. Don't blame
everyone else!
Hint: In
reality you cannot be responsible for everything, and you can't
attempt to control everything. Part of trading is to jump in and
make a trade with what information you do have.
Don't be so careful that you are paralyzed! You have to take
some risks (within your loss tolerances).
10. Fear of capital loss it the greatest cause of failure.
The emotion of fear causes traders to make mistakes. It is
normal to have your emotions effect your trading without being
aware of it! Fear will cause you to miss good trades, enter and
exit trades too early or too late, and make silly unexplainable
errors. Fear will cause a beginner to quit trading just after an
important lesson has been learned. Many traders quit along the
path of success because of fear. Trading under the influence of
anger or euphoria is very dangerous too. As soon as you are
over-confident ( wham! ) the market teaches you a severe lesson.
And never trade when you are angry.
Advice: On the
path to success, there are some key concepts that can reduce
fear. First, build confidence, paper trade, and then trade in
small quantities. Second, shift your focus from money, focus
instead on what you have learned from each trade (both
profitable and unprofitable), and what you have yet to learn.
Focus on the path to success, instead of money. Learning is a
positive experience; success and money will follow naturally.
11. How to
consistently make good trades.
If you are hard on yourself unnecessarily, you will fail due to
lack of confidence and fear. If you derive enjoyment from
trading you will do better. Do not strive for the enjoyment of
making money. Instead, strive for the enjoyment of trading
professionally. Redefine (in your mind) what a good trade is. A
good trade is one where you traded according to your
plan/strategy/methodology, regardless of profitability or loss.
Accept that losses are a cost of doing business, not personal
failures.
Advice: Reward
yourself for making a good trade, regardless of profit or loss.
Talk to others about how your strategy ensures your success
because it protects you during a losing streak, rather than
complaining about a losing streak. Of course, this requires that
you have a good strategy and confidence in it. When you have
reached this level, you will know you are a professional trader.
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