Mondayâs Blog Results: The suggested short @ 4443.00 stopped out for a 4.50-point loss. Team members saw the breakout setup that ran for 56.25 points.
Todayâs Lesson: Wrong > right.Â
Curious how Iâm going to dance out of that statement?
If youâre always ârightâ then youâll never be open minded enough to change for the better. Being flexible and open-minded to new ideas is a huge advantage in trading.
Iâm not saying you simply agree with every new idea you hear. Iâm saying that when youâre presented with an intriguing idea (setup, rule, etc.) you owe it to yourself to investigate the value of it. And if you find improvement, then admit you were wrong and change.
I was told the great investor George Soros wrote in his book about a trade he took in the Japanese Yen. It ended up a monster winner. His first entry was short based on his analysis. It failed quickly so he doubled his size and went long. Just like that.
We are all going to be wrong or mistaken at times. The key to success...
Fridayâs Blog Results: The suggested short at 4380.50 ran for 15.75 points.
Todayâs Lesson: Expect some slippage. Â
One aspect of trading many people donât consider is order execution. At first glance you may think âHow hard could buying and selling be? Click a mouse!â Getting a precise price is not always possible, though.
For example, the other day I was live testing a new process whereby the entries and exits were set at different prices and quantities. Scale-in, scale-out. There were significant advantages⌠less risk, potentially greater reward.
My platform allows for most of the orders to be automated, but not all. This meant I needed to pay attention in real time to ensure all the rules were met. OK, can do. Unfortunately, price moved extremely fast with volatile swings making it impossible to duplicate all the benefits of the rule set. It was better, and in calmer markets likely more so.
The takeaway here is that you need to start with a strategy that has significant edge. ...
Thursdayâs Blog Results: The suggested short at 4411.00 stopped out by 3 points. No long triggered.
Todayâs Lesson: âTake âem all.â
Found this quote the other day reading one of my favorite trader/educators, Larry Williams (https://www.ireallytrade.com). He was talking about the trap we all fall into of picking and choosing our trades as opposed to taking every signal (filters are still honored).
âIf you pick and choose, you will invariably pick the losers and walk away from the winners. It is nothing personal, we all do, and the way to beat this devil is to take âem all.â
This is not news to me but being the imperfect human that I am, I fell into this trap the other day. Reading this shortly afterward was coincidental but great timing for me!
If youâve ever struggled with the feeling that you pick the losers and miss the winners, try lowering your risk (or size) and âtake âem all.â Larry Williams has been beating the market for decades and worth listening to.
Todayâs Best S&P Fu...
Wednesdayâs Blog Results: FOMC day paid out HUGE. Your suggested short @ 4443.00 caught the top of the session and ran for 98 points to the suggested buy at 4345.00 (which did see a 7-point bounce before stopping out). How much did you get?
Todayâs Lesson: Expectations and reality.
People are impressionable. Sometimes that can be a problem. We can have great expectations that wonât match up with reality. A âgood resultâ can look like a failure after a big win.
Hereâs an example. Letâs say yesterday was the first time you traded the levels I share in this blog. Your first trade was a 98-point runner. Clearly youâd be ecstatic. What would your expectations be for future trade suggestions? If all you saw were 5 and 10-point winning trades for weeks on end you might be a bit disappointed. But those are more the reality.
This happened to me years ago when I started trading in the late 90âs. The strategy I found worked so well during the dot-com bubble that when volatility vanished it tu...
Tuesdayâs Blog Results: Heartbreaker! The suggested long @ 4293 found the bottom of the session and ran for 102.50 points to the suggested short @ 4395.50 which was the top of the session and ran for 44 points to the close! Unfortunately, the buy only ran 11.25 points before stopping out and the short stopped out before running.
Todayâs Lesson: Reframing.
You had the âtopâ and âbottomâ levels of the market in your hands before the open. The day had a range of 126.25 points. How could you NOT make a killing? Stop placement was the cause yesterday.
How you react to this result, a modest winning day when you could have crushed it, is critical. Getting emotional and changing your rules to fit one event is not OK.
Instead, you should practice âreframing.â This is a simple technique whereby you change the event from negative to positive.
True that you didnât get the big winning day, but the volume levels WORKED like a charm. This should be a confidence builder. Feel good about your stra...
Mondayâs Blog Results: What a day! The suggested buy level at 4303.00 was good for a 15-point bounce. Not much on a 198-point range day, but that was only one of 28 setups the Team here saw get filled.
Todayâs Lesson: Have confidence.
Before you can have confidence as a trader you need to be confident in your rules. There is a difference.
The way you get confidence in your rules is to perform deep research in all market conditions. Document thousands of trade setups. Look for edge based on probabilities.
The way you get confidence in your trading is to stop thinking you can âbeatâ the probabilities and just follow the rules like a machine.
Yesterday is a great example. The S&P sold off hard dropping almost 5% (from high to low). It gained all that back to close higher. During the plunge you might have been thinking âThere is no way Iâm taking a buy signal and trying to catch this falling knife.â Big miss with that thought, huh? Volume levels yesterday performed better on the long ...
Fridayâs Blog Results: The suggested short @ 4469.50 was a beautiful 39.75-point runner to the next level. How much did you get?
Todayâs Lesson: How to find your ârisk number.â
There is a popular risk management tool that uses a fixed percentage of your account size to determine per-trade risk (and ultimately position size). Itâs simple to use and highly effective. Hereâs how it works:
Account size: $10,000
Fixed Percentage: 2% (your choice up to 2%, higher is rarely suggested).
Per Trade Risk: $200
Stop Loss: $100
Position Size (contracts): 2
So why is this formula so effective? Because as your account grows the Per Trade Risk grows allowing you to trade larger size. Conversely, if youâre in a drawdown the Per Trade Risk will be less limiting your position size.
In fact, just to put it in perspective for you, using the numbers above you would have to endure 35 losing trades IN A ROW to hit your âno-trade limitâ (less than $100 risk). Based on the Theory of Runs, assuming a sa...
Thursdayâs Blog Results: Plenty of range yesterday! The suggested short @ 4565.25 stopped out. The suggested long @ 4494.75 bounced for 10.75 points BUT fill was an issue⌠the MES contracts touched the level, the ES did not. If you missed it, which was likely, reframe your thinking: Volume Levels work fine, we canât always get filled.
No problem with fill last night in the Globex session. Team members had the above chart planned ahead and received by 5:15 PM ET. Both trades were ideal set/forget entries making for a VERY pleasant morning today!
Todayâs Trading Tip: You donât know. Â
We love to know. Itâs natural to want to know âwhy,â âwhen,â and âwhere.â One problematic personality type Iâve met over years in trading education is the person who NEEDS to know with certainty. Trading is a game of probabilities, not certainties. Check yourself when you start getting anxious about not âknowingâ the future.
Take yesterdayâs profile for example. When the short failed in the morning and ...
Wednesdayâs Blog Results: The âalternativeâ long entry worked like a charm for a quick 14.75-point run. How much did you bank? Â
Todayâs Trading Tip: The weather report.
Years ago, the weather report was a big joke. Especially in Michigan where I grew up. Rarely did the forecast hold. Today, the technology exists to accurately forecast the weather. You wouldnât think of washing your car today until you checked for foul weather. You wouldnât blindly carry your umbrella every day either.
Forecasting the market has come a long way, too. Itâs not nearly as good as the weather report but it can be helpful. The forecasting tools you can use for the market give you edge in probabilities. Not certainties. But thatâs OK. Wouldnât you rather have some probabilities guiding your trading than going in blind?
Our trading team follows a detailed forecast for both the day and Globex sessions. They are different so the extra work is necessary to maintain edge.
Hereâs a great example of how probab...
Tuesdayâs Blog Results: Neither suggested level triggered during the day session.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Have an open mind.
You have a rule-based plan with edge. If not, get one or quit trading. Rules in this case are meant to be followed. You want to be as machine-like as possible. Not easy for many of us, but thatâs the goal.
Imagine that your plan is working fine. Your discipline following it is very good. Then you meet a trader who tells you there is a better way. Not a huge change to your plan, just a âtweak.â
Whatâs your reaction?
ORâŚ
Youâve probably met both types of traders. Fixed, disciplined, rarely willing to change and excitable, glib, and always changing.
Consider a middle ground. When you hear of a âbetter wayâ donât simply dismiss it because itâs not âwhat you do.â Donât just glibly cha...
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