5 TIPS FOR A PROFITABLE TRADE:
1. Plan the entire trade before you enter the trade. Have an entry strategy, and an exit point (both a winning exit point and a non-winning exit point). This will inherently force you to look at your risk/reward ratio. Write these entries and exits down in a journal.
2. Eliminate distractions. It's difficult enough to find trading time at all if it's not your regular job. If you're a part-time trader who trades at work between meetings and phone calls, think about this: there are full-time professional traders who are concentrating on nothing other than taking your money. It's not that they're better or smarter than you – they just have the time to focus. If you must trade, set aside blocks of time to study or trade without distraction. Or it may be more feasible to do your trading on an end-of day basis, meaning you place your orders and do your 'homework' the night before when you can
focus on it.
3. Choose a method or a small group of methods, and stick to them. Far too often we see a trader adopt a new indicator or signal only to see it backfire. Become a master of your favorite signals, rather than a slave to any and every signal. Understand that an indicator will fail sometimes. That's ok. The sizable winning trades should more than offset the small losing trades initiated by an errant signal. This trading method is designed to eliminate the emotional bias of trading.
4. Choosing not to trade can also be a prudent choice. You'll frequently hear 'don't fight the tape'. The same idea also applies to a flat market – you can't make stocks do something they're just not going to do. Wait for good entries into a developing trend rather than force a bad entry into an unclear trend.
5. Take responsibility for your trades – all of them. Examine why the losing trades failed, and why the winners were successful. The reality is that you chose to enter each and every trade. This can be painful, at least initially, since the ego is built to deflect blame yet accept praise. That's a trap. If you find yourself saying "that was a good trade entry but….." then stop yourself immediately. Either everything before 'but' or after 'but' is inaccurate. If you rationalize or justify poor trades, then you'll never learn from them. This may be the most important idea of the five – the ego can prevent real learning. If you can learn to accept some failure without being emotionally devastated, then you'll be a good trader.
The only advice I would add to this list is simply to keep a daily trading journal. This can be a journal of trades, signals, ideas, and emotions about your trading. The more you put in the journal, the more you'll get out of it. It will also help you in applying and tracking these five concepts above.
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