I joined this forum to get some feedback from more experienced traders. I have experience with stocks and options (simply buying puts and calls) and have either been lucky or Iâm somehow gifted (I tend to think the former). Over the years I have made money--but I just started day trading, so I am a bit inexperienced at that and in need of far more discipline (I'm actively working on that).
In general, I have made many successful day trades simply riding momentumâIâm actually quite good at seeing meaningful breaks of support and resistance levels and eploiting them. However, recently (probably due to the desire to make up my stock-market losses) I am having trouble closing positions in time. For example, on two recent trades, I was ahead to the tune of about 85%--yet I did not close the position. Instead, I took delight in my on-screen gains. While taking delight, a reversal began and I got paralyzedânot knowing whether I should wait for another reversal or simply pull the âmarket orderâ trigger.
In every recent case my trades have been positive up to 85% or soâbut also in every recent case I sold after losing the position to a reversal. This inability to lock-in gains is costing me very dearlyâand if I don't fix the problem soon I will surely get wiped out, I will reduce my positions as I learn and stop being so greedy. Iâm also losing big because I am so enamored with my gains that I âbelieveâ theyâll come back.
Iâm sure these are typical beginnerâs errors, but I often:
A) Fail to honor the chart pattern when I see a reversal.
B) Fail to sell a *portion* of my holdings to at least lock-in some profit.
C) Fail to know when a good time to exit would be.
D) Resort to "magic numbers"--for example, being up $925 and wanting to close the position once I hit $1000.
Does anyone have any suggestions for these problems?
Also, being very discouraged at this point, I tried to read some articles online about day-traders--and got only more discouraged. Every article I saw suggested that most day-traders are doomedâthat they are all, essentially, being fooled by randomness (to quote Nassim Taleb). I tend to think that patterns are real and are indeed evident and that breakthroughs to the upside and downside are meaningful events--especially after an extended trading range. Any thoughts?
Many thanks for a reply or even links to writings that may help address or discuss the issues I have presented.
Thanks,
Jon
In general, I have made many successful day trades simply riding momentumâIâm actually quite good at seeing meaningful breaks of support and resistance levels and eploiting them. However, recently (probably due to the desire to make up my stock-market losses) I am having trouble closing positions in time. For example, on two recent trades, I was ahead to the tune of about 85%--yet I did not close the position. Instead, I took delight in my on-screen gains. While taking delight, a reversal began and I got paralyzedânot knowing whether I should wait for another reversal or simply pull the âmarket orderâ trigger.
In every recent case my trades have been positive up to 85% or soâbut also in every recent case I sold after losing the position to a reversal. This inability to lock-in gains is costing me very dearlyâand if I don't fix the problem soon I will surely get wiped out, I will reduce my positions as I learn and stop being so greedy. Iâm also losing big because I am so enamored with my gains that I âbelieveâ theyâll come back.
Iâm sure these are typical beginnerâs errors, but I often:
A) Fail to honor the chart pattern when I see a reversal.
B) Fail to sell a *portion* of my holdings to at least lock-in some profit.
C) Fail to know when a good time to exit would be.
D) Resort to "magic numbers"--for example, being up $925 and wanting to close the position once I hit $1000.
Does anyone have any suggestions for these problems?
Also, being very discouraged at this point, I tried to read some articles online about day-traders--and got only more discouraged. Every article I saw suggested that most day-traders are doomedâthat they are all, essentially, being fooled by randomness (to quote Nassim Taleb). I tend to think that patterns are real and are indeed evident and that breakthroughs to the upside and downside are meaningful events--especially after an extended trading range. Any thoughts?
Many thanks for a reply or even links to writings that may help address or discuss the issues I have presented.
Thanks,
Jon