The only advice worth giving in trading is that you must first
prove that you can make money trading
small accounts for a year++, before you can put any real $$ on the line. Every time you move to a new strategy, you must prove that again. As you become more experienced, you can reduce that time to a couple of months. There are maybe fifty traders on this site with that amount of experience.
Most people believe that trading is a game of lots of luck with some skill. In fact, it is a game of mostly skill and very little luck.
I see stories like this all the time. The faces change, but the stories are the same:
Some middle aged guy can't stand his job anymore. He has saved $250,000 and decides to trade. He finds ET and everyone is a millionaire on ET, so he decides to go full force into trading. He tries hard, he works his ass off, he loses money. He reads motivational books, he reads zone trading books, he tries hard and concentrates hard, he loses money.
He reads more, he starts to read the posts of the traders that seem to be respected on ET, and he reads them several times. He prints them out, reads them before he goes to bed, he is excited for the next morning trading session. He trades, he tries hard, he concentrates hard, he takes small losses, he tries to let his winners run, he losses money. His account is half gone.
None of the above is anything to be ashamed about. The only shame is that you were trading 500 shares at a time when you should have been trading 10 shares at time. Then your five year losses would amount to $5k instead of $250,000.
Read this little story. If you don't have this sort of discipline, you are doomed:
http://www.fulltiltpoker.com/chris-ferguson-challenge
Finally, I think you did the right thing. But one day, if you ever decide to try again, try to
prove first that you can make money trading 10 shares at a time. If you are trying futures, try the ETFs 10 shares at time. Then 20, then 30, then 40, etc. Every time you lose, you go back down a notch. So you may go the next trading day from 40 to 30 shares on a losing day. You may never become a winning trader, but then you would have given it a shot without playing Russian roulette with your life savings.
As far as actual trading advice that is worth it's weight in gold on this thread, read what open said hundred times. If you don't understand it, you are doomed.
nitro
Quote from GolfTrader:
I have been a lurker here for several years and only made one reply, but I have a confession. I quit. Perhaps some of you will recognize yourself. I traded part time for a number of years and then day traded stocks full time for about ten years. I started with about 5K 20 years ago and built it up to over 1.4 million until about about six years ago. I made money every year until about six years ago. I have put two kids through expensive colleges (one Ivy) and paid all living expenses out of my profits over the years.
I started losing $$ about six years ago and continued to pay the bills out of my savings (profits from previous years). I wake up every morning now and dread trading and am afraid to pull the trigger many times. I believe it is an addiction and am quitting while I still have at least 60K left. I will either go back to my older profession or open my own business since I am now in my mid 50s and afraid I will not be hired.
Obviously I should have quit when I had my 1.4 million but I was and am addicted to trading.
I am writing this probably as therapy and maybe a few of you will recognize yourselves to be in a similar position.
I hope to never see another stock and will just dollar cost average into mutual funds from here on .
Good luck to all.