EIGHTEEN TRADING RULES
1.
Some traders consider trading as a sort of gambling. Without
planning and calculations, they throw money at the market.
They should distance themselves from gambling behavior. Why
a scientific approach is applicable? Markets echo similar
patterns over and over again. It allows identify reliable
trends and select good trading vehicles. 2.
Think in terms of probabilities and act upon them.There are
no certainties in trading. You can keep yourself out of trouble
by thinking in terms of probabilities. Get comfortable with
approximate predictions and interpretations. 3.
Hope, fear and greed are not strategies: they are emotions.
Simple emotions are not an effective strategy. Positive emotions
could cause us to fail to apply riskprecautions. Negative
emotion could cause us to hesitate.
Trading is a psychological game. Most people think that they're
playing against the market,but the market doesn't care. You're
really playing against yourself. 4.
Prices have memory. 5.
Bulls live above 200-day moving averages, bears live below
and try to eat up all rally attempts. 6.
Big volumes kill substantial price moves. 7.
Reversals build slowly. The first sharp dip always finds buyers
and the first sharp rise always finds sellers. 8.
Bottoms take longer to shape than tops. Greed acts more quickly
than fear and pushes stocks to drop from their own weight.Losses
are a simpl 9.
e cost of doing business. Don't try to justify a bad trade
by convincing yourself that it will sooner or later turn into
a good trade. Accept losses easily! Successful traders
are able to ride through downturn periods. The confidence
in their methods reassures them about their future success.
The markets offer endless and plentiful possibilities. Missed
opportunities exist only in your mind. Prices keep changing
and generate other opportunities. The goal of trading is make
a net profit after a sequence of trades. It is, therefore,
necessary to accept some losses and to look forward without
punishing oneself. 10.
Don't be a hero. Don't fight the trend. Follow the money flow.
11.
Forget the news, remember the chart. The chart already
knows the news is coming. 12.
Predetermine maximum losses in every potential trade.
Do not risk more than 5% of your capital on any trade. Don't
average your losses. 13.
Do not buy a stock because it is low priced (or sell because
the price is high). 14.
Buy on rumors; sell on news. 15.
Trade active stocks, avoid thinly traded markets. 16.
Prepare your action plan before the market hours and follow
it. Do not formulate a new opinion during market hours. Option
trader must forecast for:
- a price change in the underlying,
- a change in implied volatility.
Option traders must understand and keep an eye on implied
volatility. Implied volatility is the volatility percentage
that justifies the option price and reflects the market's
perception of the risk. 17.
Learn to monitor yourself and draw conclusions from your mistakes.
18.
Take a part of the profit to reward yourself. |
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