Quote from deadbroke:
Well put. Thanks.
But take this a bit further ...
if these 5 commonsense rules are ALL there is to it and that even a person of av Int. would understand them easily, then why is the trader failure rate so high? Obvious answer would be, "traders break these rules" ...
but what if these rules are a total crock to begin with?
I'm leaning in this direction because the author (amiable enough fellow) who wrote the rules is himself an analyst, not a trader. This means that he has opted to receive a salary rather than trade for himself. If these rules are so hot and he wrote them but still can't trade, then they're not worth a damn IMHO.
There's got to be something else that's still missing ....
Those commensense rules are
NOT all there is to it.
Here's a football analogy...I remember the first time I played high school football as a wide receiver. My football coach said remember 3 things...run your route, catch the ball and run to the other goal line.
Of course that's not all there is to it to be a good wide reciever but the coach was trying to
keep it simple and that's ok in the beginning or for any newbie wide receiver.
Therefore the main reason why there's a high failure rate amongst traders is a combination of a lot of reasons and each trader has more problems with a few in comparison to another trader that has failed.
* Bad Money Management
* Bad Discipline
* Poor Trade Method
* Poor Capitalization
* Inadequate Trade Workstation
* Inadequate Broker Platform for the trading style or method
* Poor Stress Management
* Poor mental and physical health
* Failure to treat trading like a business
* Poor Team Collaboration
* Lacking in Market Experience (understanding the markets) will prevent having the ability to adapt
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I can name a dozen more reasons but you get the point. Further, I've met a few guys with a good trade method fail miserably because they didn't have any of the above critical pieces.
Simply, everything works together and if something important is missing...there's no balance in the trading plan to be profitable. So yeah...there's A LOT MORE to it than what the author mentioned but he probably only mentioned the stuff that was important to him of stuff he had the most problems with and assumed others may have the same.
Sit down and make your own rules and not just the ones you're having problems with and then develop a written trading plan with all those "commonsense" rules...
Should take a few years to get everything working
(balanced) into something successful even though most traders will go belly up prior to reaching that point of balance. That's the main reason why this isn't a long career for most traders because the FAIL at keeping all those pieces working together.
Mark