Day Trading Guidance by Market Key Traders

Ideal Environment

by CptNemo 6. May 2009 23:07

 

The proper setting for focused, uninterrupted trading is of the utmost importance in the life of a day trader.  It does not matter what he wears or where it is, as long as the trader is comfortable and able to fully utilize his mind on the task at hand.  It is necessary for each individual trader to find the specific setting in which he is most suited to trade.

 The environments in which people live out their lives have a noticeable effect on their performance of tasks.  Many people find it difficult to concentrate on work-related tasks in areas of the home most commonly used for relaxation or recreation.  Similarly, attempting to read in bed will cause many people to become sleepy, as working at the dinner table will cause individuals to become hungry.  If the environment in which the trader works can subconsciously control how he thinks, and more importantly, reacts to certain situations, it is of the utmost importance to maintain as much control over this psychological variable as possible.

 Each trader should also become familiar with the specific things he requires from a trading space.  For traders that require a clean, uncluttered workspace, extra time should be devoted every day for maintaining the workspace in such a way that it’s messy nature doesn’t interfere with the trader maximizing his potential.  Other trades, while a cluttered workspace doesn’t bother them in the least, may find an office chair with neck-support to be irreplaceable should they wish to achieve full focus.

 The trader should not partake in other activities, such as eating, sleeping, or recreating, in his workspace.  Though not of absolute necessity, the workspace should have dedicated to it an entirely separate room.  The trader must condition his mind while in his workspace to think only about work, and to leave it as soon as he feels his mind start to drift towards pangs of hunger, thirst, sleep, or daydream.  If he can condition himself to maintain his winning attitude and a high level of focus in the space that he works, and is able to keep this space separate from the rest of his life, he will find himself way ahead of the game.  

CptNemo
MarketKeyTraders.com
“No decisions based on FEAR” 

 

Patient State of Mind

by CptNemo 21. April 2009 23:01

 

Traders undergo specific psychological processes throughout every day’s course of trading.  A watched stock will rarely move in the desired direction quickly and deliberately enough to assuage the agitated emotional state of a fearful trader.  When the stocks fails to immediately and pointedly move in the predicted direction, the trader finds himself filled with the most dangerous of negative feelings: doubt.

 Day traders also experience a psychological roller-coaster ride when staring at a screen to discern a profitable entry.  Successful traders will calmly and patiently wait until certain that the chances for success are substantially better than a mere pull of a lever.  In this situation, as in the one before, the presence of paralyzing doubt in the traders mind is the main obstacle to long-term success.

 Ultimately, it is patience alone that separates the weak from strong, the patience to sit quietly in wait for the perfect opportunity, and the key to patience lies in monitoring one’s inner dialogue.  All humans, conscious of it or not, experience an internal dialogue.  Sometimes this dialogue helps the individual complete a certain task at hand, like when the driver of an automobile slows down and signals before making a left turn across oncoming traffic, but internal dialogue can also serve the purpose of soothing the individual and helping them remain calm and alert.  This dialogue allows the individual to remind themselves, sometimes completely subconsciously, that they have made left-hand turns across oncoming traffic countless hundreds of times in their life, and that things will be as fine this time as they were every time in the past.

 The patience exhibited by the smart driver cutting across oncoming traffic is precisely the type of patience exercised by the successful trader.  With dozens of cars whizzing by, the patient driver’s eyes slide up the road towards the horizon, and he observes the point that will most likely be safe to cross.  When that time arrives, and that slight gap in traffic emerges, he must act immediately and cannot hesitate without risk of collision.

 It is the same for the day trader.  If the trader looks up the road for a gap in traffic, or a proper entry point to make his trade, and decides upon a certain point, he must not deviate from this decision without planning the entire trade anew.  If he decides, based on a rational trading plan, to buy at fifty five and sell at fifty seven, he has no business entering or exiting at any other point without a well thought out, logical reason.

 Patience is a virtue, and no place does this truism hold more water than the stock market.  When a trader allows doubt, a facet of fear, to inform his trading decision, he sets himself up for failure.  The market does not care about the wants of an individual trader, whereas when making a turn across oncoming traffic, a mistake may result only in an oncoming driver slamming on his or her brakes in order to avoid an accident.  The market will not extend such a courtesy.  It will run over anyone and anything between it and where it is going without as much as an afterthought.  It is the responsibility, not of the market to go where the trader wants it to go, but for the trader to determine the most likely course of the market and plan accordingly.  Patience, achieved by a trader monitoring his internal dialogue, makes it possible.

CptNemo
MarketKeyTraders.com
“No decisions based on FEAR”
 

 

Control Risk to Control Fear

by CptNemo 28. February 2009 01:01

      Fear starts teaching us at an early age.  Fear is a useful psychological tool that helps keep us safe.  It is necessary to our survival.  We generally learn from fear, and through the indelible memories formed by its consequences it affects our future judgments.  If one touches an open flame, the pain of the burn creates a fear response that stops all but the most deficient of people from repeating an action so detrimental to their well-being.   The fear of being burned births a newfound respect for fire.

      When it comes to trading, however, most traders fail to develop a sense of respect for the market.  These traders perpetually repeat their mistakes instead of learning from them: they trade beyond their means, fail to maintain their risk limit, and allow their fear and desperation to force them into bad trades hoping to cover the losses of previous poor decisions.  A psychologically weak, amateur trader will dig himself into a hole from which he cannot climb out.  Unlike him, the professional trader will not. 

      By understanding how to properly manage risk, the professional day trader instead converts this fear into a respect of the workings of the market.  Risk management allows the trader to more effectively handle adverse scenarios, thereby allowing him to be more relaxed and free to make better trades.   There are several non-exclusive methods to manage risk. 

      The most important thing any trader needs a well-defined trading plan.  In his plan, the trader must define a realistic level of potential profit and the maximum amount of loss he is willing to endure.  One way to estimate this potential profit and loss is to pick a specific period of time and observe the range in which the desired stock trades.  Once potential profit and maximum loss have been defined, the trader must stick to this plan.  As long as the trader sticks to his plan and gets out of the trade at the predefined high and low points, his is managing his risk. 

      One of the best ways to manage risk is the use of protective stops.

      Scenario: Trader A’s trading account has a balance of $100,000.  He makes two trades and wants to limit his total risk to 2% (1% or $1000 for each trade).  One of the stocks trades at $100 and his target is $2.  This stock ranges from $100 to $102.  His plan is to purchase at $100 and sell at $102, but if he buys 500 shares at $100 and the price drops $2, his trade would lose $1,000. 

      Through automatic settings on trading platforms, any trader can activate what is called a protective stop.  By setting a protective stop at $98, Trader A limits his risk to the pre-determined limit of 1%.  Some traders prefer to use mental stops to close the position when it reaches the $98 stop, however, this only works when the trader has the discipline and mental fortitude to execute it properly and at the right time, else the price could continue to fall.  Another two points, from $98 to $96, and the loss now becomes $2,000 and the urge to deny the loss can become overwhelming.  By entering a state of denial, in regards to this loss, however, the trader only further exacerbates his unmanaged risk as the trade continues to dig a deeper hole with greater psychological ramifications and further denial.  Automatic settings prevent this and are simple to use.  They leave no room for guess-work as the trader can be assured that no matter what happens he cannot lose more money than allowed for in his original plan.

      Aside from automatic stops, there are other ways to use protective stops.  One way is to base the stop on a given period of time.  For instance, in the above example if the trader expected the stock to increase to $102 within a week of his entry, and it fails to do so, then he must close the trade.  Another is to base the stop on a percentage of the stock price. For a stock selling at $100 and a desired risk of 1%, the automatic protective stop is placed at $99. 

      When utilizing protective stops it is crucial to make a detailed trading plan from the start, as arbitrarily making the stop decision as you go can lead to dangerous psychological territory for all but the most hardened traders.  Study your stock and understand the factors that move it within its range and you will be prepared to make intelligent, informed decisions as to your potential risk, and set the necessary stops to protect yourself.  Do your homework, prepare for the trade, make informed decisions, and mostly importantly, abide by the initial plan, and you can feel confident that your assets will be protected.  You will become poised, more relaxed, and confident knowing you can easily survive the worst-case scenario, and you will have eliminated the paralyzing fear that unprepared traders face. 

      Avoid the flame and you avoid the burn.

CptNemo
MarketKeyTraders.com
“No decisions based on FEAR”

Surviving the Start

by CptNemo 6. July 2008 17:26

Intraday trading for a living is not as easy as the advertisers out there want you to think it is. It requires good capitalization, hard work, a good plan, better than average tools and the right attitude to even have a shot at being successful. It doesn’t happen overnight by reading from some PDF file you’ve downloaded from the net or looking over a few charts and like magic you have a successful venture on your hands.

Let’s start with getting you in the right frame of mind. You will not make money right out of the gate.  Think of it as going to college. You have to put up some capital to learn the skills you need for your degree. After you decide on a major you meet with a counselor and map out your plan. Trading is the same way.  You put up some capital and make a plan. Start small and you will slowly become more conformable with what you need to do to be profitable.

We don’t allow our new traders to start out trading right away. This teaches them patience and gets them used to waiting for trades to setup. When new traders see screens flashing and people paring trades, they tend to get emotional and antsy.  They tend to think they are missing out on all the trades and wonder why they’re not in the trade.

Emotions have ruined many traders and will continue to test even seasoned traders. Controlling your emotions is a big part of intraday trading. Here are a few of the rules our group has used to help our new traders sway the odds of success in their favor.

  1. Have expendable income. You will not be taking money out of your trading account for a good while. This takes the pressure off and lets you learn at your own pace. Trading is hard enough and removing the stress of how you will pay your bills is a large step in the right direction.
  2. Be well funded. Do not start out with the minimum $25,000 that just meets the pattern day trading requirements. We think traders should start with a 50k to 75k minimum.
  3. Practice your plan. When you can follow your plan and don’t feel the need or urge to trade outside of it you will be ready for the next step (this doesn’t mean you did it for a week straight). The better your practice is the easier the transition to the next step. Use a log to write dates, times, and exact entry prices of your simulated trades.
  4. Review your charts every night. Go over the simulated trades you made and others you missed. This helps you get used to seeing what you are looking for, so when it happens in real time you can find them faster.
  5. Use small shares to start. This is a time to learn to manage your trades, get used to the order bar and putting orders in. It will test your emotions when real money is on the line. Can you still follow your plan? Do you start to get scared or uncomfortable when you have an open trade?
  6. Be true to yourself. If you make a mistake write it down and learn from it. Keep a journal of mistakes and review them each week.  This helps keep them in the forefront of your mind and helps you from making them over and over again. Leaning from your experiences will help you be successful.

Trading for a living can be a very good business if you plan for success from the start. We hope a few of our rules can help start you on your way to a successful trading venture.

CptNemo
MarketKeyTraders.com
“No decisions based on FEAR”