Difference between newbie struggling trader vs successful trader

First I want to tell you how upsetting your member name is to me as now all I can think about at 5am is having a Bacon Sandwich!

IMO, after being in this business since 1981, the difference between a successful trader-retail or otherwise-is process. They focus on having a process in place to allocate toward a strategy that works. They have a process to avoid what does not work and a process to manage risk. They have a set of rules and use them. Traders that lose money, month after month do not seem to stop doing the same thing day after day that does not work. After one trader a few years ago called me to say, I'm not sure why I keep losing money. I suggested he try one "opposite day". No matter what his instinct tells him to do, do the opposite for one day. He made money that day, He then realized what he was doing was not valid and need to do something else.

Bob

lol - I tend to get a mixed reaction from the username, with vegetarians usually protesting

You've hit the nail on the head with regards to process, I never really made that connection myself. I do feel that retail traders don't intentionally ignore the importance of process, but they certainly aren't made aware of it's importance from the get-go. However I'd imagine in the corporate world of trading this would be shoved down your throat in each pre-open market meeting.
 
Ah, this particular trope again......
When you place a trade, you are by definition making an implicit prediction of what the market will do.
Yep here we go again.
If there was a lottery in action with a chance if winning 1:1m I would not predict a win.
If there was a lottery in action with a chance if winning 1:100 I would not predict a win.
If there was a lottery in action with a chance if winning 1:1 I would predict a win but trading is not 1:1.
If there is a trade with a chance of winning with unknown odds' I would not predict a win.
In actual fact atm my win rate is about 1:2 in a bull market.
Even when holding for several days or longer my win rate remains 1:2 however it's because I sell losers so my loss rate can remain high, once sold a loss is forever a loss on my ledger.
When I place a trade I never predict, like a shotgun one pellet may hit the target, the others are just collateral which is lost in order to make an indescriminate gain by the unknown winner.
That's why trading is not about predicting, well it never is for me.
When I trade I don't expect a win and when I have a loss I am not surprised nor dissapointed.
 
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First I want to tell you how upsetting your member name is to me as now all I can think about at 5am is having a Bacon Sandwich!

IMO, after being in this business since 1981, the difference between a successful trader-retail or otherwise-is process. They focus on having a process in place to allocate toward a strategy that works. They have a process to avoid what does not work and a process to manage risk. They have a set of rules and use them. Traders that lose money, month after month do not seem to stop doing the same thing day after day that does not work. After one trader a few years ago called me to say, I'm not sure why I keep losing money. I suggested he try one "opposite day". No matter what his instinct tells him to do, do the opposite for one day. He made money that day, He then realized what he was doing was not valid and need to do something else.

Bob
Couldn't agree more about the process and rules
 
I meant successful trader will just aim for decent, not very high success rate.

YES!!!

Decent success rates (40-60%) have higher long-term avg reward to risk ratios.

High winning pcts in the long term have 1:1 reward to risk ratios or worse (starting at 70%+).
 
First I want to tell you how upsetting your member name is to me as now all I can think about at 5am is having a Bacon Sandwich!

Perfect!

IMO, after being in this business since 1981, the difference between a successful trader-retail or otherwise-is process. They focus on having a process in place to allocate toward a strategy that works. They have a process to avoid what does not work and a process to manage risk. They have a set of rules and use them.

MORE Perfect!!

newbie - he tries to predict the market
successful trader - he has already given up predicting the market
newbie - he aims for higher accuracy
successful trader - he aims for mediocre accuracy

Why not, "All of the Above"??
As an options seller, I did not have to have the market's behavior nailed down for the hour or the day, but within a range for the week.
As a trend/momentum trader, I only need to spec what defines as a solid trend, and then to jump ship at the first hint of aberrant behavior.

Accuracy is still *good*, but I'm not *dependent* on it.
I'm trying to map the tides, not the individual waves.
 
When I place a trade I never predict, like a shotgun one pellet may hit the target,

"Really. RRRRRRReally."
And I suppose you just randomly aim the barrel before you pull the trigger? :rolleyes:

:D Sheeesh.
 
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