Like I said before, this thread is very instructive. Iâm starting from scratch, but can afford $2k/month as risk money. I donât plan on just jumping into the market, Iâm reading as much as possible and am starting to use some software and âe-moneyâ to help me understand what Iâm doing. Iâm in the middle of the first âDummiesâ book for online investing. A few more for basic education, then on to John J. Murphyâs, âTechnical Analysis of the Financial Markets.â I donât claim to be a genius or anything, but I am motivated and want to learn this stuff.
What I really find interesting is his strategy. Like you said, you had no background on him, so I assume he made his money himselfâand wasnât a trust fund baby or anything. Maybe he was in finance and went private once he had a good enough portfolio. In any event, his strategy was to crunch the numbers and buy like Corporations do. He tried to anticipate what they did, and it sounds like he was successful at it.
I donât understand all of the implications of these paragraphs, but I assure you, I will try to understand every bit of it. I think its gold! He gave you a condensed education that you could have not gotten in any book:
"...He uses 100% market orders. No stop or limit orders. I used a limit order once when I wanted to get a price for an exit with profit. He lit into me "Who the hell do you think you are? If you want out...get out!!! Don't screw around and risk losing money because of a tick." That is burned into my brain.
The basic trading entry is all in at entry and then lighten up without price moving in our favor and out when proven wrong for loss or all out with a profit when a turn appears imminent. We never used stops and did the six sec. routine. Ex. If he thought the market would go up then I'd place maybe 10 contracts long. If the price didn't move but the analysis moved from market strong to market normal then I'd take off 3 contracts at whatever price. If the market went back to strong then I'd add them back in. Once the market went from strong to weakening then I'd close out the position. On trend days we'd just hang on all day long and exit around the close.
The only indicator he ever showed me was a one standard deviation Bollinger Band. He'd point to the std. dev. lines and said see these? They represent the range of the past. If you need some help on anticipating direction 65% of the time the market will turn around near one of these lines. If the market goes through the line or stays on it, it's trending...don't go against it..."
Please continue this thread, Iâm learning a lot. Thanks, you gave me some insights I donât think I would have ever gained otherwise!

What I really find interesting is his strategy. Like you said, you had no background on him, so I assume he made his money himselfâand wasnât a trust fund baby or anything. Maybe he was in finance and went private once he had a good enough portfolio. In any event, his strategy was to crunch the numbers and buy like Corporations do. He tried to anticipate what they did, and it sounds like he was successful at it.
I donât understand all of the implications of these paragraphs, but I assure you, I will try to understand every bit of it. I think its gold! He gave you a condensed education that you could have not gotten in any book:
"...He uses 100% market orders. No stop or limit orders. I used a limit order once when I wanted to get a price for an exit with profit. He lit into me "Who the hell do you think you are? If you want out...get out!!! Don't screw around and risk losing money because of a tick." That is burned into my brain.
The basic trading entry is all in at entry and then lighten up without price moving in our favor and out when proven wrong for loss or all out with a profit when a turn appears imminent. We never used stops and did the six sec. routine. Ex. If he thought the market would go up then I'd place maybe 10 contracts long. If the price didn't move but the analysis moved from market strong to market normal then I'd take off 3 contracts at whatever price. If the market went back to strong then I'd add them back in. Once the market went from strong to weakening then I'd close out the position. On trend days we'd just hang on all day long and exit around the close.
The only indicator he ever showed me was a one standard deviation Bollinger Band. He'd point to the std. dev. lines and said see these? They represent the range of the past. If you need some help on anticipating direction 65% of the time the market will turn around near one of these lines. If the market goes through the line or stays on it, it's trending...don't go against it..."
Please continue this thread, Iâm learning a lot. Thanks, you gave me some insights I donât think I would have ever gained otherwise!
