Quote from cit13:
Thank You NoDoji
Did you use your paper trading experience to develop a trading plan with rules for entries, risk management and profit-taking?
I did paper trading enough I think just to get familiar with options.
I know how to setup trades with STOCKS where I had Entry, Risk and Profit taking Rules.
To quickly summarize what this sheet does...
I am starting to realize how important this sheet is because when I do not have this plan in front of me... My brain goes crazy and I just do unpredicable stupid things.
I think Swing Trading most apeals to me. Where I am in a trade on average to a week to monthish period. With out my plan I think I was setuping up the trade to be like a Swing Trade but I would exit like a Day Trader.
You revealed a recognition of some very key issues here:
1. Without your plan in front of you, your mind will indeed play tricks based on simple human nature related to fear and ego.
2. You're mixing time frames, entering for a swing, but managing like a day trader (maybe even as a scalper where you move stops to break even after a small favorable move).
When you combine these two factors it's a recipe for disaster. You'll be choking off your profits, letting the losing trades make a full run, and you're at serious risk of letting a small loss become a larger one by using more distant time frames to validate a thesis that's been proven incorrect in the time upon which you based your initial trade.
It sounds as if you have a plan, but need to follow it strictly, or perhaps hone it a bit more so you're comfortable with it. Or maybe you need some coaching on cultivating a trader's mindset (definitely read Trading in the Zone).
Losing trades are normal in any profitable trading plan. They're similar to the labor costs and/or cost of goods in any business. In short term trading, you purchase many shipments of inventory and there will be defective or spoiled inventory along the way. You quickly discard the bad inventory and move on, knowing from your trading business plan that more of the inventory will be high quality than poor quality and you'll be able to turn it over for a profit more often than not.
The only factor you left out is whether or not you're choosing ideal levels and methods for entry. This is technical knowledge that can be learned from any decent trading book or web site.
Can you share a few of your trade entries (date/price) so we can see if there might be improvement in that respect?
P.S. When buying options for directional plays, you can use the movement of the underlying stock to set conditional orders for your option trades.