Monday, December 5, 2016

7 Things Each Trader Has To Accept If They Want to Trade


If you truly are serious about being a trader then there are seven things that you will have to accept.
  1. You will have to accept that over the long term at best only 60% of your trades will be winners. It will be much less with some strategies.
  2. Accept that the key to being a successful trader is having big wins and small losses, not big bets paying off. Big bets can lead quickly to you being out of the game after a string of losses.
  3. Accept that the best traders are also the best risk managers, even the best traders do not have crystal balls so they ALWAYS manage their capital at risk on EVERY trade.
  4. If you want to be a better trader then you need to accept that trading smaller and risking less is a key to your success. Risking 1% to 2% of your capital on any single trade is the first step to winning at trading. Use stops and position sizing to limit your losses and get out when your losses grow to these levels.
  5. You must accept that you will have 10 trading losses in a row a few times each year. The question is what your account will look like when they happen.
  6. You have to accept that you will be wrong, a lot.  The sooner you accept you are wrong and change your mind the better off you will be.
  7. If you really want to be a trader then you are going to have to accept the fact that trading is not easy money. It is a profession like any other and requires much work and effort and even years to become proficient. Expect to work for free and pay tuition to the markets through losses until you learn to trade consistently and profitably.
Trading is about math, ego control, risk management, psychology, focus, perseverance, passion, and dedication. If you are missing one, you may not make it. Trade wisely my friends.

Four Types of Trades


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“There are really four kinds of trades or bets: good bets, bad bets, winning bets, and losing bets.” – Larry Hite
Hite explains that good and bad trades are independent of winning and losing trades. Therefore, a winning trade wasn’t necessarily a good trade, and a losing trade wasn’t necessarily a bad trade. There are trades that are good when taken that end up losing and trades that are a bad idea from the start that make money.
We should not get to excited over winning trades or beat ourselves up over losing trades. We must have the ability to logically assess whether our reasons for taking a trade were valid upon entry.
A good trade can lead to a loss because of the nature of randomness.
A bad trade can lead to a big win due to luck.
Winning trades can come from bad entries or good entries in the short term.
Losing trades can be caused by bad entries or good entries in the short term.
In the short term trading results can be random but in the long term managing risk, going with the trend, and following a system with discipline will separate the lucky traders from those that have an edge.

Trading Methods, Systems, and Plans

trading-methods-plans
Do You Know the Difference Between Trading Methods, Systems, and Plans?
There are significant differences between trading methods, trading systems, and trading plans. These variations can be confusing for new traders, but it is important that students of the market understand and develop these areas in order to optimize their chance of success.
Trading Method
A trading method is the overall process and trading style that is used to profit from the markets. A trading method can be defined as principles used to successfully trade in the stock market, options, forex, futures, or bonds. These operating principles are based on the belief of long term profitability and increased value of trading capital. Traders using different systems and different plans can use the same methodology. Methodology is based on the specific style of trading, with some examples being:
  • Technical Analysis
  • Trend Following
  • Value Investing
  • Momentum Trading
  • Growth Investing
  • Swing Trading
Trading System
A trading system is a set of rules that quantifies buy and sell signals, as demonstrated by successful testing on price history or chart studies. A trading system is the specific kind of data or knowledge used to execute the trading method, based on price action or fundamental valuations. These signals are triggered by measurable technical indicators or key levels on charts. Trading systems have specific parameters relating to position sizing that manage risk and increase the probability of profitability over time. A trading system has at least eight quantifiable elements:
  1. Entry signal
  2. Exit signal
  3. Winning percentage
  4. Risk to reward ratio
  5. Position sizing parameters
  6. Frequency of trading opportunities
  7. Average expected annual return
  8. Maximum expected drawdown
Trading Plan
A trading plan is a set of rules, consistent with a trader’s chosen methodology and system that govern how trades will be executed in real-time. These rules determine what will happen based on the trading system’s entries and exits, risk management, and psychology. The trading plan is meant to keep the trader disciplined and safe from their own weaknesses, while providing the parameters for consistent profitability.
Understanding the difference between methodology, system, and plan is essential to organizing and implementing trades at the right levels. As traders turn research into beliefs, trading methods will become their religion, trading systems will become their bible, and their trading plan will allow them to walk in faith every day.

15 Ways to Manage Trader Stress


Trading stress is primarily caused by two  things: either not knowing what to do, or knowing what to do and not doing it.
Many times, a new trader will discover that there is a big difference between reading about trading or simulated trading, and trading with real money on the line. Stress can knock a trader out of trading faster than anything else. You have to trade like it is a business. Realize that it is highly probable that half of your trades will be losers, and your profits will come from the other half of your trades. You can not control the market, you can only control what you do, your entries, exits, position sizing, and method. Practicing discipline and self control at all times keeps you out of very stressful situations. The key to trading success is about stacking the odds in your favor, and not thrills. This is a business not an amusement park ride, trade accordingly.
  1. Only risk 1% of total trading capital per trade, with stop losses and proper position sizing. Proper positions sizing eliminates serious emotional impact of any one trade. Each trade is only one of the next one hundred, which gives traders a totally different mental perspective than an all in/have to be right Hail Mary trade.
  2. Only trade a  position size you are comfortable with.
  3. Trade a method or system you believe in, based on backtesting of a positive expectancy.
  4. Know where you will get out of a trade before you get in.
  5. Only trade with a detailed trading plan.
  6. Believe in your ability to follow your trading plan. You must have faith in yourself to lower your stress level.
  7. Know yourself as a trader, and only take your kind of trades. Take trades that will leave no regrets because they were good trades, regardless of  the outcome.
  8. Do not listen to any unsolicited advice about the trade you are in. Follow your own plan and shield yourself from distraction.
  9. Sit out markets that you are uncomfortable trading due to volatility or  looming risks. Know when it is time to trade and time to ‘go fishing’.
  10. Do your homework before you trade. Be confident in your trade until it hits your stop. Get out when your stop is hit.
  11. Keep your ego out of your trading. Run it like a business, with the profits and losses as your focus, not your ego.
  12. Only trade when the odds in your favor. It is much less stressful trading this way.
  13. Do not blame yourself for losses if you followed all your rules. The market giveth and the market taketh away.  Just keep taking your entries and exits.
  14. If you do not know what to do, DO NOTHING.
  15. To lower stress levels, trade less and get away from watching every single price change. Day traders could trade only the open and closing hour, swing trader and trend traders could just take opening or closing signals. You could go from every tick to just checking in every hour or so if you have options or hard stops in. Most of the days trading is random noise, and randomness will stress. Focus on your time frame, and only the quotes that really matter when they matter.

Top 25 Money-making Trading Books

I was curious to see what I had missed in my decades of reading the best books on trading and the stock market. I was glad to see that we all shared a love of the books that I thought were some of the very best.  I  believe this is an excellent and informative list for new traders upon entering the trading field. While many lessons will only be learned after experiencing real trades, real losses, and the challenges of trading psychology, I still believe in learning from others as a shortcut. I have read the first 22 of these 25 books and I give them all 5 out of 5 stars. Each book title is linked directly to its Amazon page to simplify your research.

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Traders Top 12 Favorite Trading Blogs



I conducted a poll titled “What is your favorite trading Blog?”  looking for the top trading blogs online. I was trying to get the poll out there and have some diverse voting. I looked around online to find other top trading blog lists to build my original poll. Thanks to everyone who cast a vote and also to those that took the time to fill in a blog under ‘other’ that allowed us to discover new blogs I had not heard of but seem great. I ended up getting 389 people to participate and I am happy with the results. My original plan was a top ten list but three blogs ended up in a tie for 10th, not wanting to leave out any of the three great blogs that tied I expanded this to a top twelve list. I had heard of many of these blogs before and read some of them at times. I believe this list could provide a great starting point to quickly find a few blogs that fit your trading style. I know I will start checking them out myself and find the ones that want to read going forward.

Find a Monster Stock in 15 steps

Monster stocks are those wonderful beasts that make you look like a genius trader.
Shorts think that they are way too expensive and will crash, so they go short and have to cover en-mass after another 10 point run; they create even more buying pressure. Traders that short monster stocks do not understand the momentum that earnings expectations and growth cause for a stock’s price. They do not understand supply and demand. A stock that is $300, $400, or $500 based on earnings per share, could still be fundamentally cheaper than a $10 junk stock that has billions of shares floating around with tiny earnings per share.
Sounds great, but where do we find these beasts?
Many times, they are right under our noses. What about your new favorite energy drink, your favorite store at the mall, a new drug you are using with amazing results, your favorite restaurant, or the fact that you love everything Apple? Choosing a company you love is just the start of the process. Next you have to find out if it is a growth story, or if it is in decline. A stock’s price can only increase in conjunction with earnings growth or future earnings expectations.An old, giant, low growth big cap stock can only grow through innovation and not size.
“Buy the best, forget the rest.”

How to Find a Monster Stock
  1. Review the IBD 50 each week for the best stocks in the market. The list is in the Monday edition of Investor’s Business Daily and available by subscription to www.Investors.com.
  2. Look for higher priced stocks, with a minimum above $20. The best are often times the most expensive before splitting: $200, $300, $500 and up.
  3. Earnings should be greater than 25% for the past few quarters, and growing steadily.
  4. Sales should be close to equal with earnings and growing at +25%.
  5. The best stocks should have a return on equity between 25% and 50%.
  6. Look for growing industries where profits are expanding.
  7. Monster stocks are the #1 company in its industry. Buy the best, forget the rest.
  8. The stock should trade at least 500,000 shares a day, preferably a million.
  9. Monster stocks are currently loved by mutual funds, and there are holders and buyers.
  10. Monster stocks are special. They have a new product, service, innovation, or business model that is hard to copy or compete with.
  11. Monster stocks have their best price action in bull markets with their key moving averages price supports at the 5 day ema or 10 day sma.
  12. Even in bear markets or corrections, monster stocks bounce at the 50 day or 200 day sma creating a high probability entry point.
  13. The majority of monster stocks have high volume options traded on them, creating liquidity that can be traded with little bid/ask spreads.
  14. The majority of monster stocks are household names or most people know about their product.
  15. Find and trade the very best monster stocks. You only need 5 to watch and trade.
Recommended reading: Monster stocks book by John Boik.
(Never risk more than 1% of your total trading capital on any one trade, always plan your position sizing carefully and have a planned stop loss along with a trailing stop to lock in profits.)

Trading in the Dark

This is a great point and article shared in my Facebook trading group:
From Simon Vuko: The below principles have massive trading implications for newbies:
‘The Dunning-Kruger effect explains that the problem isn’t just that they are misinformed; it’s that they are completely unaware that they are misinformed. This creates a double burden.”
“Studies have shown that people who lack expertise in some area of knowledge often have a cognitive bias that prevents them from realizing that they lack expertise. As psychologist David Dunning puts it in an op-ed for Politico, “The knowledge and intelligence that are required to be good at a task are often the same qualities needed to recognize that one is not good at that task — and if one lacks such knowledge and intelligence, one remains ignorant that one is not good at the task. This includes political judgment.” Essentially, they’re not smart enough to realize they’re dumb.”
– Psychology Today, 13th September 2016
Too many new traders rush into trading after a string of luck confuse luck with skill. Or they study a bunch of information and confuse knowledge with experience, actionable skills, and the right process. One of the most dangerous things for new traders and investors is to be ignorant of their own ignorance. The first steps in education in the finance world is learning what the right questions are to ask. Then understanding that so much of trading and investing is a psychological game more than a game of math.
Here are some warning signs of new traders that are blind to important market dynamics:
  1. They think big returns can be consistent and easy.
  2. They do not understand that bull market and bear market price action is very different.
  3. They do not see the importance of position sizing and risk management because they are over confident in their trading.
  4. They see no need for talking about trading psychology.
  5. They think trading is all about making a prediction and betting big on it and letting it play out with conviction.
  6. They have never heard of the term risk of ruin.
  7. They think successful traders are either flaunting mansions, girls, and sports cars or they are not successful.

3 Dimensional Trading

Trading is not really all about stock picking, predictions, and opinions. It is not even just about a winning system. Yes, first you have to understand how to trade and put the odds in your favor of winning, but that is not enough. You must also add in risk management so when you lose several times in a row your trading career and account does not end there. You also must have  faith in your system and method to be able to keep trading it even when you are losing money, and you will have losing months, maybe even a losing year, can you keep trading through the tough times and stay around for the big wins?
One dimensional traders just have opinions and predictions, if they are right they win for awhile, but eventually they do not stop out when they are wrong because they value their opinions over the stop loss and eventually blow up their account. They also eventually get emotionally frustrated from wild equity swings  and they eventually quit and blame the market.
Two dimensional traders have a good system and cut their losses but have trouble with self confidence and belief in their system. They tend to blame themselves when their accounts have draw downs and have trouble understanding that it is just part of the game. The market environment is determining wins and losses not the trader, two dimensional traders don’t  understand this they are missing the winning trader psychology. All traders can do is take their entries and exits as they come and let the market do what it does. They have not separated themselves from their trading. Generally the two dimensional traders end up giving up due to not being able to handle the psychological ups and downs of trading real money during losing streaks.
The three dimensional trader takes entries and exits based on his methodology that he believes in, he manages risk per trade carefully and never loses more than 1% t0 2% of his capital on any one trade. The 3D trader’s self worth and confidence is not tied up in any one trade, or monthly performance, he understands this is a long term process with ups and downs. Wins and losses do not change the 3D trader’s mindset. It is just a business, trading positions are just inventory, the market gives and the market takes away, and the 3D trader just takes what it is giving.
“Successful trading depends on the 3M`s – Mind, Method and Money. Beginners focus on analysis, but professionals operate in a three dimensional space. They are aware of trading psychology, their own feelings, and the mass psychology of the markets. Each trader needs to have a method for choosing specific stocks, options or futures as well as firm rules for pulling the trigger – deciding when to buy and sell. Money refers to how you manage your trading capital.” – Alexander Elder

40 Steps In The Trader’s Journey

40 steps in the trader’s journey from new trader to rich trader.
They are as follows:


  1. We accumulate information, we learn- buying books, asking questions, maybe going to seminars and researching what really works in trading.
  2. We begin to trade with our ‘new’  found knowledge.
  3. We make profits only to give it back very quickly and then realize we may need more knowledge or information.
  4. We accumulate more information.
  5. We switch the stocks we are currently following and trading.
  6. We go back into the market and trade with our improved system. this time it will work.
  7. We lose even more money and begin to lose confidence that we can even be traders. The reality of losing money sets in.
  8. We start to listen to other traders and what works for them.
  9. We go back into the market and continue to lose more money.
  10. We completely switch our style and method.
  11. We search for more information.
  12. We go back into the market and start to see a little progress.
  13. We get ‘over-confident’ in a single trade and put on a big position believing it is a sure thing and the market quickly takes our money.
  14. We start to understand that trading successfully is going to take more time and more knowledge than we ever anticipated. MOST PEOPLE WILL GIVE UP AT THIS POINT, AS THEY REALIZE REAL WORK IS INVOLVED AND THAT THIS IS NOT EASY MONEY.
  15. We get serious and start concentrating on learning a ‘real’ methodology.
  16. We trade our methodology with some success, but realize that something is missing.
  17. We begin to understand the need for having rules to apply our methodology.
  18. We take a sabbatical from trading to develop and research our trading rules.
  19. We start trading again, this time with rules and find some success, but over all we still hesitate when we execute.
  20. We add, subtract and modify rules as we see a need to be more proficient with our rules.
  21. We feel we are very close to crossing that threshold of successful trading.
  22. We start to take responsibility for our trading results as we understand that our success is based on our ability to execute our methodology.
  23. We continue to trade and become more proficient with our methodology and our rules.
  24. As we trade we still have a tendency to violate our rules and our results are still erratic.
  25. We know we are close.
  26. We go back and research our rules.
  27. We build the confidence in our rules and go back into the market and trade.
  28. Our trading results are getting better, but we are still hesitating in executing our rules.
  29. We now see the importance of following our rules as we see the results of our trades when we don’t follow the rules.
  30. We begin to see that our lack of success is within us (a lack of discipline in following the rules because of some kind of fear) and we begin to work on knowing ourselves better.
  31. We continue to trade and the market teaches us more and more about ourselves.
  32. We master our methodology and our trading rules.
  33. We begin to consistently make money.
  34. We get a little over-confident and the market humbles us.
  35. We continue to learn our lessons.
  36. We learn smaller positions lower the volume of our emotions so we trade smaller and this surprisingly makes us better with our discipline.
  37. We learn that risk management is one of the biggest keys to winning as a trader, we start to understand that big losses will make us unprofitable so we finally trade a smaller and consistent position size.
  38. We stop thinking and allow our rules to trade for us (trading becomes boring, but successful) and our trading account continues to grow as we increase our position size only as our account grows.
  39. We are making more money than we ever dreamed possible.
  40. We go on with our lives and accomplish many of the goals we had always dreamed of. Money is our new tool to do what we have always wanted.

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

3 Pillars of Trading Performance

As an active trader, there are 3 key factors of your strategy that you need to pay close attention to. There’s no holy grail in trading, but tweaking and maximizing these 3 things can get you pretty damn close to one.
We refer to these factors as the 3 pillars of trading performance:3 Pillars of Trading PerformancePillar #1 – Edge
Edge is a concept that decades of trading literature have beaten to a pulp. You’ve heard it a million times:
“You need a positive edge to win long-term.”
And it’s absolutely true.
In trading, edge is your ability to select trades that perform better than random.
You can think of edge as the process used to generate and execute entry and exit signals. Professional traders spend a majority of their time on this process alone.
They’re constantly asking themselves questions like:
How can I refine my research to enter the absolute best fundamental plays?
How can I better time my exits and entries using quantitative cues?
How can I cut my losses through improved exit parameters?
The more they improve their entry and exit signals, the stronger their edge becomes.
To increase your own edge, relentlessly search for holes to plug in your trading process. This could involve a stronger focus on improving your fundamental analysis. Or maybe refining your profit taking approach. It could also mean tighter risk management or really any number of other factors that go into an effective trading strategy.
The stronger your edge, the more profitable you’ll be.
Pillar #2 – Frequency
Frequency refers to the amount of times your edge expresses itself in the market.
HFT firms may see a million opportunities a day to exploit their edge.
A deep value manager, on the other hand, may only see his edge show up a few times a year.
Frequency matters because the more opportunities you have to apply your edge, the higher your earning potential that year. Ideally you want to apply your edge as many times as possible.
But of course keep in mind that the optimal frequency will differ between strategies. If you expect to increase the frequency of your deep value strategy to a million opportunities a day, you’re out of your mind. At that point you’ll be investing in everything and anything, with concept of “value” thrown out the window.
This is where frequency can become a double-edged sword. The key is to increase it in a way that does not degrade edge.
Few people think about the trading process from the frequency angle. They tend to focus only on cultivating an edge, but never give any thought to how often that edge can be executed.
Look at your own trading process.
What type of edge are you developing?
Is its frequency optimal for your particular strategy?
For example, if you’re a deep value investor, are you looking at as many markets as you could be to find the best deals? If you’re only investing in US equities, would a trip into the foreign markets increase the frequency of the value propositions you’re able to find?
The more often you apply your edge, the more money you can extract from sweet Mr. Market.
Pillar #3 – Leverage
Leverage, like frequency, is rarely discussed, yet extremely important. It can mean the difference between average and superior performance.
Leverage simply means deploying extra capital above your cash level in the market.
Now a lot of people will tell you that using things like margin to add leverage to your trades is dangerous. And that may well be true for the green-behind-the-ear trader, but proper use of leverage for a professional is essential to their success.
Soros’ Quantum fund would routinely achieve leverage levels of 4 to 1. That means that for every million dollars in their account, Soros and Druck had 4 million in bets out in the market.
Here’s Soros himself on the concept of using leverage:
It is a rather unusual structure, because we use leverage. We position the fund to take advantage of larger trends – and then, within those larger trends we also pick stocks and stock groups. So we operate on many different levels. I think it is easiest if you think of a normal portfolio as something flat or two-dimensional, as its name implies. Our portfolio is more like a building. It has a structure; it has leverage. Using our equity capital as the base, we construct a three-dimensional structure that is supported by the collateral value of the underlying securities. I am not sure whether I am making myself clear.
Let’s say we use our money to buy stocks. We pay 50 percent in cash and we borrow the other 50 percent. Against bonds we can borrow a lot more. For $1,000 we can buy at least $50,000 worth of long-term bonds. We may also sell stocks or bonds short: we borrow the securities and sell them without owning them in the hope of buying them back later cheaper. Or we take positions – long or short – in currencies or index futures. The various positions reinforce each other to create this three dimensional structure of risks and profit opportunities.
If you want to blow the doors off the average performance you see in the market, you need to focus on increasing your leverage as much as possible.
Now the obvious caveat to this statement is that you should never press your leverage to a point where you risk bankruptcy. A proper risk management system will tell you the max amount of leverage you can apply per trade without going broke. For example, don’t go trade a 10 lot of E-minis on a $10,000 account. That would not be wise…
Intelligent uses of leverage are critical because they not only increase returns, but they can actually reduce overall portfolio risk too.
Ray Dalio was one of the first investors to popularize this concept (also known as risk parity).
Say Asset A returns 5% a year above the cash rate, with a volatility of 7%.
And Asset B returns 15% a year above the cash rate, but with a volatility of 30%.
Which is the better deal?
If you can’t apply leverage, and you want to make more than 5% a year, then you’re forced to go with Asset B.
But if you understand how to apply leverage, you could easily lever up 3 to 1 (borrow 3 units for every 1 unit you own). This would allow you to buy 4 units of Asset A instead of 1, transforming your returns to 20% a year with 28% volatility — a much better deal than Asset B’s 15% a year with 30% volatility.
Creative uses of leverage in your investment strategy will put you leagues above other investors without leverage.
An Optimization Problem
Once you understand the 3 pillars of trading performance, your goal should be to maximize each.
Maximizing your edge means winning more and winning larger. Maximizing your frequency means applying that edge more often. And maximizing your leverage means juicing your capital base.
But here’s where it gets tricky. You can’t blindly maximize each pillar individually. You’ll end up destroying your strategy and landing yourself in the poorhouse.
The problem is that each pillar affects the other. Adjusting one leads to a change in another one.
Say for example you decide to lengthen your investment timeframes. You believe higher time frames have less noise and stronger signals.
Great!
You end up increasing your expected value per trade through a larger edge. But before you run off to raise a few hundred million, you need to consider what are you’re giving up to achieve that higher edge.
The answer is that you’re giving up your frequency.
If you make $2 a trade on higher timeframe monthly charts, which provide a frequency of 25 trades a year, you’ll make 50 bucks.
But what if that same strategy on lower timeframe daily charts made $.50 a trade, with a frequency of 200 trades a year? The daily program, despite the lower edge (profit per trade) would generate $100 a year in profits. That’s twice the returns of the higher timeframe strategy!
In this case the strategy with the smaller edge actually makes more money per year. This is why those pesky HFT’s do what they do. Yes, smaller timeframes are noisy, making it harder to create a meaningful edge, but if that smaller edge has a higher frequency than a larger edge, then it may actually be optimal.
This is why optimization becomes difficult. You can beef up your edge by adding more criteria or filters to produce a better signal, but by being more selective, you decrease the frequency of your entries.
It may actually not be in your best interest to beef…
You see a similar problem when reversing the frequency/edge relationship.
Say you want to jack up the frequency in which you apply your edge. To do this, you start looking for more and more chart set-ups. But at the same time, you start loosening your trade criteria further and further.
At a certain point you realize that every tea leaf and chart candle has become a trade, and before you know it your trading edge erodes into oblivion.
In this case, increasing frequency hurt you because your edge degraded in the process.
There are even more problems when it comes to leverage optimization.
As we explained before, the goal with leverage is to maximize as much as possible without exposing yourself to bankruptcy risk. There are many different ways to creatively (and safely) do this.
Say for example you have a lukewarm strategy that uses stock and ETFs. And its returns end up being the same as any standard buy-and-hold passive strategy. If this is the case, the strategy isn’t worth it. Might as well throw your money into a Vanguard fund or something.
But here’s where leverage can make all the difference. You may be able to take that same strategy, and instead of using stocks and ETFs, use futures to apply concentrated leverage. All of a sudden you might have something halfway decent on your plate.
Here’s another example. Say your strategy’s entry signals vary in strength.
Sometimes the signal is pure and sexy like the dime standing at the end of the bar. And other times it’s muddled and a little drab, but what the hell, you’ve been in a dry spell lately so it’s still worth your time.
Having the ability to leverage up or down depending on the strength of your signal can lead to much better performance. Your best trades can have the most oomph behind them, while your lesser trades can hang back a bit.
If you’re not thinking about leverage, you need to start. You’re missing out on a crucial pillar that will help juice your performance to Market Wizard heights.
The next time you approach your trading process, go at it with the 3 pillar optimization problem in mind.
Recite these three questions to yourself on a weekly basis:
How can I increase the expected profitability (edge) of each my trades?
How can I optimize my trade frequency?
How can I leverage my current capital?
And when it comes to optimization:
Are the three pillars of my strategy flexible?
If so, can I manipulate one and still come out with a juiced up bottom line?
Start to look at your trading process from a multi-dimensional point of view. Focusing on improving a particular setup or exit methodology is good and all, but that’s just one part of the puzzle. It’s playing a 2-D game. You need to look 3D and beyond…
Think in 3D
How do you approach trading? For our methods click here.