Quote from ilcaa:
Hi I have read alot of how important it is to set goals on a daily, weekly, monthly basis but then I read and experienced how concentrating on the $ leads to losses and frustration, also when having a daily goal of x amount of dollars your exits are usually based on achieving these goals and not what is hapening in front of you....
What daily goals do most successful traders refer to when planning there trading day,week, month?
Can anyone share some real concrete daily goals they use that helps them in trading. Thanks for the help.
Hi ilcaa,
You need to know what level of trading those traders are that have said setting daily goals are important.
First of all, unless your different, most
losing traders should not be setting daily profit targets.
It encourages them to stay in that losing cycle.
Instead, they should set goals based on their ability to follow their trading plan or the ability to do something particular that they feel is a key to becoming a profitable trader.
However, if you are a profitable trader...its ok to set profit number goals.
Yet, the goal should not be based upon daily numbers. Weekly, monthly or quarterly goals is more suitable.
Now...getting back to the issue of
daily goals...
Regardless if your a profitable trader or not, the ability to follow the trading plan should be at the top of the list.
For me I have a daily ranking of my trading performance based upon a 5 star rating (5 star the best).
Also, I measure my ability to follow the trading plan via a ratio based upon comparing the number of trades I took via the trading plan in comparison to the number of overall trades i took.
For example...lets say I took 7 trades today and only 5 of them was via the trading plan (5 divided by 7)...
Producing a ratio of 0.714
Then tomorrow I took 5 trades and 4 of them was via the trading plan...
Producing a ratio of 0.800
This tells me my ability to follow my trading plan improved on the day I did such in 4 out of 5 trades in comparison to the prior day.
Now...the above is just basic stuff for me.
If you really want to...you can do it for each aspect of your strategy (entry strategy, stop/loss protection strategy, trailing stop strategy, profit target strategy and contingency plan strategy).
I do the latter above whenever I'm using a new strategy that has gone from the backtesting/simulation trading stage into the real money trading stage...
Doing such until the real money trading results are consistent and I'm happy with such results.
Also, for
trades that results as a loss...you can keep a ratio on the stop/loss protection strategy because its important to know if your sticking to the trading plan of not letting a small loss become a bigger loss.
However, although I have a ratio as a daily goal...I mainly pay attention to my weekly ratio goal because the daily goal puts too much pressure on me in comparison to the weekly goal.
In fact, I perform better when I follow the weekly goal in comparison to the daily goal.
My ratio targets > 0.70
In all, the above isn't perfect and most likely not suitable for all...
However, it works very well for me and the mathmatics is simple.
Last of all, here's an additional trading tip.
Start doing live-recordings of your trading session in which you record everything on your monitors (charting program, broker execution platform
et cetera) via a tool like Camtasia.
http://www.techsmith.com
The ability to review your trading day any time you want...especially when you want to go back to a particular day when your trading plan goals weren't reached...
The live-recording can be an eye-opener to see exactly how price action itself or what occurred that particular trading day that resulted in you not reaching your trading plan goals.
Simply, the ratio measurement and Camtasia helps my trading a lot.
NihabaAshi