It's good to be in losing side in initial before feeling super great in winning side at last. Much much good than the worst vice-versa.
It's good to be in losing side in initial before feeling super great in winning side at last. Much much good than the worst vice-versa.
yeah a difficult ask though an extremely important one. It is very much essential to contain your emotions. They can have a drastic effect on your trades otherwiseWell at least you have to eliminate this emotions from your trading. Then you will considerable improvement in your trading psychology
In about 2 months I have lost about $940. I am fully aware that some have lost much more than me. However, it is alot to me. I work for min. wage.
Before I started trading live I was paper trading and did extremely well. Originally my plan was to trade spreads on Nadex but i was unable to produce a bank statement to open an account so i took my business to forex.com. Looking back that was probably a good thing because the spreads offer even more potential exposure than spot FX.
When I started trading live most of my trades went against me. At least 70 percent of my trades went in the red. I was confused because I was doing so well in paper trading. It is obvious to me now that the fact I was trading with real money put in an emotional factor that my paper trading had not prepared me for.
One time I holding a short position over the weekend in the USD/JPY. I was wrong and it gapped up at the Sunday open and I was down about $70. When I got home from work and I saw this I yelled the f word, which caused my dad to ask my mom what the problem is. A few days earlier I had told her I was losing money and she told him. Upon hearing this he came downstairs and told me to stop throwing my money away and that he's going to stop supporting me if I keep doing what I'm doing (I'm 18). At this point I was down about $300 which he did not know about. With tax season coming I have no idea how I'm going to explain to him why I'm writing off almost $1000 in capital losses.
One big thing that made me not really think about risk management is the lack of horror stories online. Everyone wants to talk about how they turned $5000 into $50,000 in one year trading the ES or whatever, but no one wants to talk about how they lost everything they have. The main reason I am posting this is to stop other people from going down the same path I did. Trading, especially leveraged trading, can ruin your life quickly.
The mere hope, a slim chance that you can win destroys all common sense of the guys who join. We all want to earn that's why we have to risk.everyone knows that fore is highly risky that's why it is always advised that please don't trade with that capital which you are not ready to lose.
How did you get your account opened? Did you lie when they asked about your net worth and liquid assets? Why would you trade on such micro account. Have you ignored all the warnings that are circulated by everyone to not trade on such small account size?
No trading with small amount is good, 10x's his account and his loss would be the same 50% of his account or $9400, everyone loses at first, greed and fear are hard to master so that's good.
Everyone lies on the account opening, it's upto us to understand and accept the risk and out own personal circumstances.
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Re small accounts, if you read the OP between the lines it would have become clear that the intent of OP was not to learn but to get rich quick. Small accounts bankrupt people quick, that is all small accounts do to anyone who does not peruse them for the intended purpose, which is to learn.