Day Trading Guidance by Market Key Traders

Patient Traders Win

by CptNemo 31. March 2009 11:20

All winning day traders possess a certain degree of patience.  They wait for ideal opportunities in the same way a sniper waits to take a perfect shot.  Without a high probability of success and a pre-planned avenue of escape should he miss or were something else to go against him, the trader, like the sniper, will have a mighty short career.  The successful trader sits and patiently waits.  He watches the movement of his indicators.  He tempers his impatient urges to make entries into the market with reckless abandon.  When the moment arrives, he is there, waiting: one shot, one kill.  He has achieved his objective and exposed himself to the least possible amount of risk.  

A trader may find it difficult to become more patient.  It requires, first and foremost, that the trader admits his own impatience, something not an easy feat for many people.  Once the trader has come to terms with his own impatience, he must determine the way in which his impatience affects him negatively as a trader, and actively to correct the imbalance.  The trader should examine himself from the third-person perspective, as if watching a TV show, to try to determine how impatience impedes his ability to trade successfully.  Is his impatience exacerbated by fatigue, hunger, risk, or all three?  By determining which specific variable or set of variables causes him to act rashly and with emotion, he can drastically improve his standing in the market. 

Impatience frequently signals the trader’s lack of confidence in his actions.  When faced with the fear of a potential loss, the trader may lack the impulse control and patience to hold onto a strong stock that has momentarily turned against him, but the trader must have the patience to truly examine the situation in which he finds himself.  By doing so, and still determining that he wishes to close his position out at a loss, he has exercised patience and done the correct thing.  Many a time, however, the trader will find that, despite his temporary loss, he still desires to be open in the position.  In this scenario patience, not raw emotion, has won out, and his trading will be much stronger in the long run because of it. 

Exercising patience ultimately comes down to self-control and the ability to put off short-term wants and needs for long-term gains.  The now-or-never mentality is a the worst nightmare for anyone wishing to be a successful trader.  Akin to a poker player going on tilt, the trader who tries to will his way to success in the market inevitably ends in failure. 

In the end, the slow and the steady win the race.  Having a one-hundred percent win ratio on five trades is infinitely superior to a sixty-percent rate on thirty.  Time is always on the trader’s side.  Sooner or later, just as in Texas Hold’em, the trader will pull a high pocket pair – the perfect trade.  He will see his entry and through his patience and thought he will understand precisely the reason for its perfection.  This experience will gradually teach him to better identify these trades until one day they jump off the screen at him.  He will start to see the value of an ace-king off-suit and so on down the line until one day he has a deep understanding of how to win even with rags.  On the path to this point he must never give in to the temptation to act upon impulse.  He must always remember that day trading takes time.  Profits will come, but only eventually.  Only by remaining calm and patience can there be any long term success. 

CptNemo
MarketKeyTraders.com
“No decisions based on FEAR”