Professional Day Trading Steps
Everyone trades a little differently. The trading
method outlined below is MY personal approach to trading. This
method has worked for me for the last 20 years, and has helped me
to avoid big draw downs since the mid 1980's. My trading strategy
has helped me to make a good living trading.
It takes some time to learn my method of trading
because it's based on tape reading and getting a "feel" for the
market. This is *not* about a fast,easy formula to "get rich quick"
while you sweat out every trade. Instead, this is about developing
confidence and trading consistently without fear and without big
draw downs.
Here is my 10 Step Approach to Learning My Style
of Trading:
1. Practice exiting trades at break-even, using a
one-tick target, a two or three tick soft stop (mental stop) and a
1.5 point hard stop. Never *allow* the market hit your hard stop.
Exit by moving your target toward your hard stop, not by moving
your hard stop towards your target. With time, all of this must
become a reflex. You won't always be able to keep your losses down
to 2 ticks, but only on rare occasions should you find yourself
letting the market hit your hard stop. ("Rarely" means only about
once every 50-100 trades after you get the hang of it.)
Even though your entries won't be good enough in
the beginning to make a profit trading these tight soft stops, your
entries will gradually improve until you turn the corner and become
profitable.
Learn exits and entries separately. Don't let the
one influence the other.
Taking losses this way takes dedication and
discipline, so stick with it. It's the key to confident trading. If
you never take large losses (and rarely medium size ones), the fear
of loss pretty much goes away, and your confidence grows.
Especially after your entries improve enough to support a
"scalping" type exit strategy.
2. Every trade *in all market conditions* begins
as a scalp. Let me clarify this: if you're in a choppy market and
you're looking to get small gains, like a point or so, manage your
initial hard and soft stops *exactly* the same way you would in a
quick trend or any other type of market. That means keeping losses
as close to 2 ticks as possible, taking lots of break even trades
and exiting every time the market doesn't give you *instant
gratification* (within a minute or so).
No matter what the market is doing, you must
demand that it moves in your favor right after you enter, otherwise
you get out as close to break even as possible. This means you'll
be closing a lot of trades near break-even within the first minute.
This is the foundation of learning to trade for consistent
gains.
3. Don't worry about the commissions on
break-even trades. If you do, you'll hold on to losing positions,
begging them to turn around for you. This is called *hoping.* In
this business, this type of *hoping* is the kiss of death. Your
money-making trades must move your way in the first minute or less.
When trades don't act right in the first minute, most of them will
hit your hard stops.
So don't get hung up on the fact that your broker
loves you. Who cares if he/she makes a living?
Your concern is *limiting losses*. I care more
about this than anything else in trading. (Well-timed entries make
my tight soft stops possible, so they're almost as important as the
exits.)
4. Practice your entries until your timing is so
good that you can *reasonably expect* the market to go your way
immediately, before it goes more than 2 ticks against you. This is
not easy at first, but if you stick with it, you'll get it.
5. Practice fading the emotional extremes on your
entries. (Fading means entering in the opposite direction of the
market's last move.) When an extreme NYSE-Tick (often above 1000 or
below -1000) occurs at the same time the market accelerates into a
support or resistance area, look for a price stall or reversal and
fade the move. Fade the emotion.
6. Rarely, if ever, *chase* the market on your
entries. Wait for a pullback to get onboard a trend.
I favor shorts over longs... I can get out of a
short position quicker than I can get out of a long position. I
don't know why. I like to say that I "see gravity better than
helium." In the rare strong-trending markets where I may chase an
entry, it's going to be a down trend, not an uptrend. I don't trust
up trends enough to chase them. Maybe it's just a personal quirk
and maybe not. I honestly don't know.
But it's interesting to note that most (not all)
professional traders I've met are Bears and prefer short positions
over longs. You should give it some thought and find out which
direction works better for you. Are your losses bigger on shorts or
longs? Specialize in one direction and trade the other direction
only when things are looking real good.
7. Never let a gain turn into a loss. This will
mean getting out of most trades a little (or a lot) too soon. You
just have to live with it. Swing for home runs (greed) will ruin
your trading. There is no mechanical formula that I know of, (such
as, "move your stop to break even after you get 3 ticks gain") that
will work. You have to develop a feel for how the market is acting
at the moment, and use your feel to reduce your target or advance
your hard stop. This comes with experience.
8. Develop a feel for the big picture movements
of the market, not just the intraday action. Use the end-of-day
market internals to analyze the market's mood and develop a daily
bias.
9. Practice does *not* make perfect. Only
*perfect practice* makes perfect. I learned this in my younger
years, pursuing a professional
baseball career. Perfect practice will keep your losses smaller
than your gains in the trading business.
There are a lot of things involved in perfect
practice. When you get tired, or when the phone rings, or whatnot,
*don't trade*. Always, *always* exit trades exactly the way I've
outlined above on every trade in every market condition. Always
*wait* for your pitch, the well-timed setup for entering. Don't
practice sloppy entries just because you're bored. Only perfect
practice will help you. Anything else just amounts to practicing
bad habits.
10. Get a mentor. I traded for 6 years before I
learned to keep my losses small. My trading turned around
immediately after I met my mentor and talked to him on the phone
for one week. Is there any serious profession that you can learn
without a mentor? Maybe there is, but I don't know of any. It's
certainly not trading.
About the Author
Mike Reed is author of TradeStalker's RBI
Trader's Updates. He has been trading the Market
for 23 years. His support and resistance numbers have been
published on the internet since 1996. Mike's nightly support and
resistance zones are specific and incredibly accurate. He offers an
unlimited free trial of his nightly TradeStalker RBI Trader's
Updates.http://www.TradeStalker.com Copyright 2005 Mike Reed
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