Been around the block for many years now. Trust me, the overwhelming majority of gurus and educators are completely full of sh@te. Think about it logically, if you wanted to build a reputation as a trainer what would be the best thing you could do? Get audited and verified P&L trading accounts and do live streaming (not upload a video after the session). Every company has to do it for accountancy reporting and its a massive boost for the clients . So why not trainers. They would gets thousands of followers willing to pay a lot!. How is it the youtube guru always seems earn 10x more than the winning teams at various trading championships.
Most trading books are just full of fluff and can be reduced by 70%, they go on and on about topics like money management risk etc, Sure it's vital but its a easy topic that any one can talk and sound like an expert. It's akin to telling someone who just bought a sports motorbike, 'make sure you wear a helmet and don't crash into a wall or you will become a vegetable for the rest of your life' All well and good but doesn't teach you how to ride a bike.
You mention Dr Alexander Elder, I was on his site Spike Trade for quite a while. His group consistently underperformed the S&P and his best gold star traders barely out performed it.
Books get 5* reviews by people who are living on the "promise" of making money . Books and trainer can help speed up the learning process, nothing more.
100% best way in my view is to just try try and try again. Ignore every f@cking cherry picked chart anybody shows and starts talking about the middle of the chart (You can use it to understand the concept) To evaluate a strategy , open up your own chart and jump back 1000 bars or so and just go through it bar by bar and ask yourself , ok what will I do here, what pattern am I looking at ? How much will I risk etc. Its tedious as sh@t but its a true test. Trading is not hard, just a long long road it's like anything in life, playing piano or whatever, you need to just get stuck in and practice practice practice. The good thing is that you can be dumb as a bag of bricks and be successful at trading. Look at all the nonsense around fibonacci as it if it has some magical meaning. Mathematically it's irrelevant for movement of stock prices however its still useful as many other traders believe it. That's the key concept.
My personal view is don't use sims for any more than a few weeks if that, I'll bet every person giving you that advice didn't do it himself or doesn't actually trade much. just do cheap as you can, even if you lose 10 x $5 in a row, its only $50 but the 10 losses in a row really have an impact mentally. In a sim if you lose $1000 you will forget it in an instant . If you are one of these nerds that need to use a sim for a year, you are far too cautious in life and not suitable for all the ups downs, mental strain that comes with trading.
Thank you a lot for advice. I will continue reading, but will put everything in actual trading. Actually it’s been almost 4 months since I’ve started trading, and I lost around 40% of deposit, which is about 40$. I’m not sure how bad is that, but I hope that doesn’t mean I will not be able to finally create profitable strategy
