Trading isn’t about winning or losing,
it’s about self discovery.
You only learn from losing trades.
Along with the probability that your trade
will be profitable,
there's probably a greater probability
that it won't be. Think
about the trade you'll make if things
don't work out.
Don’t be afraid to go where the market
wants to take you.
Moving averages are very important. The
steeper the slope, the
better the trade.
Markets tend to overshoot.
Never meet a margin call. Liquidate. The
margin clerk is your
best friend.
When someone says “Believe me, it’s
different this time” don’t
believe it. Markets are expressions of
hope, fear and greed, in
other words, human nature. Human nature
doesn’t change.
The fact that human nature doesn’t change
is why
Shakespeare is relevant, we read Plato and
are in awe of
Sophocles. Technology changes, human
nature doesn’t.
In trading, he who has the best rules
wins. Your innate,
intuitive brilliance only talks to you
occasionally.
To panic is human.
The market will all too soon locate,
expose and exploit your
weaknesses. All strategies have a
weakness. Know yours,
Achilles.
When you put a trade on, it should work
almost immediately.
If it doesn’t, seriously consider bagging
the idea and look for a
new setup.
At the same time, take trades. The only
way you are going to
make money is by taking trades.
Don’t worry about winning or losing on a
particular trade.
There’s only one concern: does the trade
help to grow your
bottom line.
Hope is not an action.
The more efficient a market is, the more
random it is. If a
market is inefficient, the more that
market will trend. The
efficiency of a market is inversely
correlated to its liquidity.
Do you look at your positions as assets or
liabilities? Liquidate
the liabilities with extreme prejudice.
If you are in a position and you are
losing more in that position
than you can reasonably expect to make,
get out.
It is far easier to lose money trading
than to make it. It is far
easier to make money trading than to keep
it.
A margin call argues for your continuing
status as an amateur.
If the market prints your price and
doesn’t fill you, go to the
market.
If your trading begins to resemble an
exercise in madness, at
least take a break for a day.
A market trades to try and fill all
orders: limits, buy stops, sell
stops, everything. If there aren’t any
orders, there’s no reason
for the market to move.
If your indicators are lagging but your
data is high frequency,
you should be okay.
If your data is low frequency, your
indicators are useless.
Your ability to discriminate, to
successfully think critically, is
inversely proportionate to the
profitability of your positions.
You can go broke taking profits, very
small profits. This type
of trading behavior will also convince you
that you're
performing better at the buy/sell game
than you really are.
When the pundits start talking about a
barrel of crude oil and
a bushel of wheat as not really a barrel
of oil or a bushel of
wheat but an asset class and you are long,
get nervous.
Your next trade could be your last trade
for a very long time.
Be aware of this and don’t let it happen.
Use stops.
Markets are challenging: when illiquidity
meets volatility
parallel lines converge, divergences
converge, convergences
diverge and mathematical certainty is
forced to embrace new
theorems.
If you are down a certain, predetermined
percentage of your
equity (for some this could be as little
as 2.5 and for others this
could be as much as 15%) and you have open
positions,
liquidate and go to cash. You and the
market aren’t on the
same schedule. (No one ever does this).
Hitting the reset
button is a psychological palliative.
When all your trades are going incredibly
well, when you’re
seeing the market as if you’ve already
read tomorrow’s papers
and you’re just about ready to thicken the
callous that resides
just below your left shoulder with your
right hand, get out
Webster’s and reread the definition of
coincidence.
Markets are thematic. In fact, those
flashing numbers are
always trying to tell or sell a story.
Become a better reader.
Don’t think of the market as an opponent
to be bulled,
bloodied, battered and beaten. Its
resources are far greater
than yours. It’s better to concede the
conceit of market as
ocean in all its obvious metaphoric
diversity.
The Myth of Sisyphus resonates in the
experience of
trading.
Remember that irony is alive, well and
constantly at work in
the universe; irony, the cornerstone to
the construct of the
divine comedy.
Trading isn’t about winning or losing,
it’s about building
equity. Taking strategic losses is a key
to building equity.
Winning or losing on any one particular
trade is meaningless.
A market is a market. It can do anything
it wants. It doesn’t
have to make sense. A market is only
obliged to itself. In fact,
exploiting this fact will lead to your
best profits.
Just as persistence allows mediocrity to
soar, a persistent, rule
driven trading approach seasoned with just
the right touch of
intuition can turn your sow’s ear into a
silk purse.
What you want to have happen in a market
often prevents you
from doing what you should be doing in a
market.
That which is true, never changes. A
market, a dynamic
revaluating, discounting mechanism, always
changes. There’s
very little that’s true about a market.
Beware of the new paradigm; it may not be
wearing any
clothes.
If you don’t crave profit, profit may be
attracted to you. If you
don’t fear loss, loss may not be attracted
to you.
If you want to be condemned, keep doing
what you’ve always
done.
Worst positions leave last.
Trading is like procreation; if you’re
nervous it just isn’t going
to work that well.
The market is an imperfect game. Chess is
a perfect game. All
information is transparent. Either you are
a smart player and
can see the board or you are a challenged
player. There is no
luck. Poker is an imperfect game. You
don’t know all variables
and bluff by itself can win the day.
You only learn from losing trades. A
winning trade is simply a
confirmation of your current
infallibility.
Do everything you can to keep a losing
trade an annoyance
rather than a memorable event.
If you are in a winning position, remain
aware that just as the
sea reclaims land, the market wants its
money back.
Never disrespect the possible (especially
option expirations).
A trade is a trade. It is a financial
event. It is not a justification
or repudiation of your geopolitical or
eco-political model.
Don’t convince yourself that you’ve
figured out the puzzle. The
puzzle keeps changing. Eventually the
puzzle just disappears.
You have to be willing to give back, to
fold, to square your
position to cash. If you don’t give
something back they will end
up taking it back.
Markets spend as much time going up as
they do going down,
the only difference is amplitude.
As the futures market is a zero sum game
and the instruments
of trade expire continually, regression to
the mean should be a
frequent event. The stock market is
totally different; for every
buyer there doesn’t have to be a seller
and the life of a stock is
theoretically, potentially, infinite.
Regression to the mean
should be a “less frequent” event at Wall
and Broad.
Good trades are often counter intuitive.
There’s far greater skill in trading well
when you’re behind
than in trading well when you’re ahead.
Ascertaining the correct value for 6
variables before making a
trading decision is not better than
ascertaining the correct
value for 3 variables. When it comes to
heuristics, kiss.
All your answers have questions.
Markets are mechanisms that foster
irrational behavior.
Don’t let your trading be held hostage to
the need for
discernment.
As soon as market action can be explained
and generally
understood, expect the market to change.
Before entering a trade, mentally
understand and accept all
potential loses.
If you have to win you’ll lose.
If you have to lose, you will.
The seeds of doubt are self sown.
On initial order placement, never be
impetuous. Wait for your
price.
Look for ways to take action. Idle
brilliance addles.
Good trades usually set up with a sense of
inevitability and
unfold in slow motion.
Remembrance may be the inability to let
go.
In trading, feeling comfortable should be
an uncomfortable
feeling.
You can’t continue to court disaster
without eventually landing
a date.
You’re only as young as your last winning
trade.
People feel more comfortable with losing
positions and more
nervous with winning positions.
If you have a position in a market and the
average true range
of that market is 128 points and the
market has only had a
range of 28 points so far, start figuring
out which side of the
market is going to deliver the next 100
points.
When asked to play a game, then stopped
mid game and asked
how they are doing, people invariably
state that they are
performing at better levels than they
actually are.
Work on four things: fear, anger,
frustration and judgment;
it’s all derived from fear.
Anger is the clash of desires.
Whatever you believe is undoubtedly
correct until the passage
of time offers another suggestion.
Simplify. If you are using 4 indicators to
trade, use three. If
you are trading 5 markets, trade 4, then
reexamine the number
of indicators you’re using.
Markets generally lack conviction,
especially post 9/11. That’s
why trend traders have a low incidence of
winning. Take
advantage of that.
What funds buy, they sell. No fund is ever
going to take
delivery of a barrel of oil or a bag of
coffee. Take advantage of
that.
You manifest the world through
interpretation.
Life is, at least, the non-annihilating
coexistence of opposites.