Quote from :
I was trading NIFTY index futures of India. Stocks appear to be extremely volatile here (got burnt many times during scalping and now I feel stocks are just too difficult for me), rather the pattern of NIFTY is more or less uniformly directional but the size is big for me (I think I can't try fractional lots). I am using MetaStock Pro for Nifty, I use Equis - MACD and wait for DMS confirmation and ADX outage/SAR whichever first to exit with trailing stops on a 5 min chart.
I faced typically some of the scenarios that probably hold me back.
These are the things that happened in forex, stocks and index, I tried.
1. While every indicator is supportive, I enter the market and the direction changes and I incur a loss.
2. After joining the market, may be I see a small profit (refuse to take it) and wait a little while (for a bigger profit as the indicators did not direct otherwise) just to see the market has turned around.
3. I take a small profit to see the market moves in a big way in my direction while I have got just a pie. In such cases, if I 'have joined the trend' again, I saw market reversed.
I lost a good amount of money already and I feel kinda shaky sometimes but I don't really wanna drop out. Kindly tell me how I can face these situations.
Thank you guys for your help.
Sukhen
Sukhen: I may not have as much time or be advanced in trading as you ... I can still see overall objectively.
Most (loser) traders may underestimate the power of detriment a loss has upon them.
Think of it as dating a girl. So you date this really hot girl for 6 months and are in bliss... then she drops you cold.
You think you can go out and just start dating another really hot chick? Not necessarily but you don't want to "drop out" either.
So... just start again... small (ugly chick who really needs a date) then build your confidence... nothing wrong with trading small and boring - it is only to *heal* from the devistating wounds of incurring losses that happen to everybody.
(on demo accts) I've liquidated (caught margin calls) more times than I care to mention - so, loss simply is not something we as traders can calculate OUT of a trading plan/structure... it is mainly in how we deal with it (them) that matters both before and after.
There's nary a heavyweight champion boxer who has not been knocked out in his life. Consider the legend of Jesse Livermore.
There's a saying, "My winning trades are all in front of me."
Since each trade is different we must make sure we take measures to NOT carry a loser over onto the next trade. When you win - leave (for awhile) - when you lose - definitely leave for awhile. Get out, take a walk - take a break - put things into perspective. Realize the profession you choose to do is the hardest one on earth with the greatest payoffs.
The richest man on the planet is a trader (Warren Buffett) - this is what many people don't realize. He trades in stocks and currencies just like others. Bill Gates is technically richer than Buffett but it is just because he has all those employees making him rich - Buffett just trades.
If you have the desire to trade, continue - but, as a wounded
soldier cut back on your battling ground some. Nothing wrong with retreating - it is a good and sound strategy - that, if not heeded, can lead to financial ruin.
Buddy of mine, who I BEGGED to reduce his position size lately just before he got his clock cleaned for $38,000 ($28K credit - $10K borrowed) by taking a long EUR/USD position before it tanked a few hundred points (last week).
Remember, NOT taking a position is TAKING a position.
Trading LESS size-wise can be a smart trading tactic of offense when a trade calls for it - and trading while "shaky" definately calls for it.
Don't think I never traded live - I traded the NASDAQ .coms in '99 for months before I blew my acct up. Why? By trading 90% port clips at a time.
300 trades to double my port - 4 to vaporize it.
ol