Quote from quotetrader:
I have another question for you- what material did you read /study from when getting prepared for your trading
and what books/ other materials would you recommend?
It seems you do alot of studying/reading on trading and I'm wanting to do some more myself, so I'm wondering if you have any recommendations
QT, Here's my self-education in chronological order and it includes the most valuable books I've read:
Feb-Apr 2008: Unemployed after sale of business, stumble into the idea of trading stocks to make money and have several successful swing trades, followed by some big draw downs that "come back" and make good money.
This is hands down the worst thing that can happen to a new uneducated trader.
Mar-May 2008: Learn about options from Etrade seminars, make incredible profits very quickly, then incur some big losses. Why? Because what happened from Fed-Apr taught me that "good" stocks always "come back".
Until they don't.
May-June 2008: Learn about stops from Etrade seminars. Read "The Market Guys' Five Points for Trading Success". Placed my first short trades (a quick day trade based on news, and a couple put option trades based on 52-week highs). Watched Oliver Velez' free webinar where he promotes his prop firm, but provides very intriguing day trading strategies based on candlestick analysis, S/R and retracements. Learn about candlesticks and paper-trade these strategies for a month. Read Josh Lukeman's "The Market Maker's Edge"
July 2008: Start actually day trading. Day trading went well. Attempted some swing trades and options trades with poor risk management (even after reading Market Maker's Edge), and lost a bunch of money.
August 2008: Discovered stochastics as an indicator and began studying them in real time while trading.
October-November 2008: Hit a bottom, left with little confidence, and no other job prospects. Read Oliver Velez' "Tools & Tactics for the Master Day Trader". Decided it was "do or die" time.
December-Present: Finally became profitable trading small size, exercising somewhat better risk management, and continually applying my hours of screen time to better and better pattern recognition.
I still read a lot, just finished Mark Douglas' "Trading in the Zone" which is all psychology.
I don't want to "overeducate" with every possible form of technical analysis, because I feel that I have solid strategies and risk control at this point.
So my advice to new traders: Get hours and hours of screen time with a sim account before jumping in, and NEVER forget risk management comes first!