Characteristics of a Successful Trader

Quote from learn&earn:

what about Discipline? I am far from a vet in the market or here on ET (so take whatever I say with a grain of salt), but I think being disciplined about your trading approach and money management are very important factors in trading. p.s this thread is LEGIT!

Good point. Discipline is a word you'll often hear in connection with successful trading, and with good reason. The need for discipline probable fits well with the discussion of being logical, not emotional. If you can't follow your trading plan, then you're just blowing in the wind, and your odds of success are greatly reduced.

I've always liked the quote "Plan your trade, trade your plan." Without discpline, even the best trading plan can lead to failure.
 
A successful trader is able to manage the uncertainty and chaos that arises from family, friends, and lovers. It can be very difficult to achieve this, especially if the trader has been born and raised in a world with little to do with the financial world or in an environment with traditional views towards money and entrepreneurship.

I remember reading a trader write about a '$15,000 hair dryer' that resulted from losses he incurred while working through some drama with his wife during the trading day...
 
Great thread!

After reading it I was reminded of a book I read a few years ago.

A little google research led me to the book and the story in the book that stuck out.

The book is "Enhancing Trader Performance" by Brett Steenbarger.

The entire chapter (attached as a PDF below) is worth reading but "A Tale of Two Traders" is part I found interesting.

I have always been a little mre emotional than others when trading.

Not the guy that yells and screams and pounds the desk after breaking his keyboard but more verbal than others when things dont turn out like expected.

For me getting upset and verbal is ok but STAYING that way is not as it impacts my trading decisions

I believe its very hard to stay emotionless when you are dealing with anything you are truly PASSIONATE about.

Great thread and thanks for sharing!

P.S. PDF wouldnt attach for some reason but here is the link:


http://media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/67/04700386/0470038667.pdf
 
Quote from lescor:

IMO, the number one trait that makes a good trader a great trader is the ability to let go of a mental attachment to money. It is very hard to do, and takes time. You have to be able to make rational, almost mechanical decisions based on what is the right way to execute your plan. Proper risk control relative to your account size is part of that plan, but you have to be able to think without letting where your p/l is affect you.

This is the first thing I thought of also when reading Eric's thoughts. One thing I would like to add is that the best way to succeed in doing this is to surround yourself with better/bigger traders than yourself. If your daily goal is to make $500/day and the guys around you are doing $5000 then you aren't going to be satisfied with that goal for long. If the guys around you are only doing $200/day then you feel like a king and get lazy.

It's about detaching yourself from your ideas about what is a lot of money. You can't compare your trading income to friends in other fields.

I know that's not exactly what Corey was trying to say, but it's related.
 
Dustin is 100% correct. After getting stale trading remote for years i joined a prop shop were the top 10 guys make 10k-300k
each and every day.Its simply motivating to watch the top guy throw down 50k min almost every day no matter if the markets flat. It shows you the possibilities.
 
There are many kinds of successful traders ... so very hard to look for a consistent set of characteristics or traits, if any, at all.

For some, successful trading can simply be making 1K a day through trading, and look no further. As long as someone having this goal, made it and consistently get it, I can sure call that person a successful trader.

For some, successful trading means making more $ every day, the more the better, that is a much harder goal. Of course most beginner would choose this kind of goal that does not make much sense as there would be a very limited # of people who can do it.

Traders are not zen masters. Cursing, getting angry over a trade, etc. are simply an expression of one's emotion. The key is to understand who you are and trade with a style that fit your personality to reduce the overall emotional swings.

For discretionary trading, that is especially important because we not only trade our setups, manage the risk of the positions in real-time, we are also subjected to the emotions related to trading. Being able to observe your own emotional state and being able to react to that logically ... I guess that defines a successful state of mind for trading.

e.g. I remember someone who after getting out of a very bad trade, would break the pencils he used to write his order tickets (yes, very long time ago) ... walk away for 5 to 15 mins. Then he look for next trade right after. :)
 
Quote from Cheese:

This thread already shows why most cannot turn trading into success; success is becoming wealthy, becoming rich.
...

So very NOT true.

You have provided us with YOUR definition of success. My definition of success has nothing to do with "becoming rich". Yet, by my standards, which are the only standards that matter to me, I am rich, in many ways, and therefore according to you I am wealthy, therefore I am a success. You really should re-read the "humble" attribute.

Success is a result.
Failure is a result.
A winning trade is a result.
A losing trade is a result.
A break-even trade is a result.
No result is better or worse, nor easier or harder to attain than any other result. They are just results. You may "want" one result over another, but that does not make the "wanted" result any more valid. The result itself is "wealth".

Cliche I know, and generally thought of in a financial sense, but ... being poor is a temporary condition. Poverty is a state of mind.

Good thread
Osorico
 
There is an ancient saying that to live happy, live in secret. Keeping secrets has many psychological benefits and it came to mind when I read your story. I think you're on the right track.


Quote from xxxskier:


We were invited to a thanksgiving dinner by a relatively new friend. At the dinner, there many very interesting, highly intelligent people present that I met for the first time, a very high level NASA engineer (now retired), a few physicians, a couple of high powered attys, a former economist turned TV producer, and two very successful entrepreneurs, etc. No traders and no one in finance. After it became known that I was a trader, I tried to be low key about my recent success, but eventually my ego got the better of me....perhaps I was trying to socially establish myself among this group of highly successful people. Of course people asked me for tips, and for predictions and I uttered my usual, "tips are for suckers" line and told them about the dangers of predicting when your just a daytrader. At first I thought I was doing pretty well, maintaining my HUMBLEness....but the ego is insidious and I found myself getting all puffed up and thinking how great I was.
 
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