Thank you. I didn't see that on the econ. calendar. Still things to learn
I have my mini frig, blender, fruit, ping pong balls(they don't make as deep holes in walls) and Keurig in my office. I never leave and have small cat door and regular door stays locked, cat don't make arguments cept when out of catnip.Holy smokes I go down to make a smoothie and oil explodes. short covering ? wow.
Jas, when you don't shoot yourself in the foot by making changes, amazing what you can do. Congrats on another PROFITABLE week.
STARBUCKS TIME, Fade the reports, harder they go in one direction, go the other way when they stop going hard.
probably not a good setup for an amateur though?
That was actually my first "have a plan and do it" success. It goes in cycles, but for a while CL was 80% of the time retracing whatever the reaction was to it's weekly report on Wednesdays. So after 3- 5 min it would retrace all the way back to before the report and then it would go the same amount -- in either the same direction or the opposite. Sort of a double fade. CL did that for months, and then the pattern changed (became less reliable).
I really admire J for the changes he has made.
Saw this TED talk and was reminded of the change he has made. It is just 10 min about how we make decisions. There is one part about how after losses it takes our minds longer to make a decision. Interesting. Everything she talks about has direct application to trading IMO.
After this I understand better that time when I would lose 5 ticks, lose 5 ticks, lose 5 ticks, and then it goes 10 ticks in my favor and I take it because I might lose even that… and then watch it continue on 50 – 100 ticks in my favor. I would sit there with a good plan and a 5 tick loss for the day.
The effort to think differently after a loss reminds me of what RN has been teaching and J has done and is doing. Perhaps it is the kind of thing traders who succeed do and those who quit don’t quite figure out. It is a certain kind of mental work.
Keep after it Iwilldoit...
Thanks Hooti, great video. i agree it definitely applies to trading.
Another one that helped me was hearing about Prospect Theory. My understanding is it states "One becomes more risk seeking after a loss and more risk averse after a win" Which explains why one does revenge trading and cut wins short.
jas