that one i have not heard in my 30 years of tradingJack Schwager said it wisely that “there are a million different ways to trade, but all of them are hard to find”
damn right
but trading is a lot easier if you have capital to trade
see my post 490
that one i have not heard in my 30 years of tradingJack Schwager said it wisely that “there are a million different ways to trade, but all of them are hard to find”
taht is right., available at the push of a button in an decent charting package.
my father worked for 30 years as a pilot and as much as he tried he could not take his money with himHey Padu, where did you get those > USD200,000 in the first place if you’re an Indian living in India?
As far as I know, India is very poor country, and you don’t seem to be any good at running business, so where did you get the money from?
A scammer?
Selling drugs?
Being a pimp?
A corrupt government bureaucrat taking bribes?
Inheritance?
I’m curious.
before i do that, do i enough capital to trade?
for day trading i never have.
ok my dear friend.Watching live charts is important. As is looking at past charts. If all you do is watch charts live, your memory isn’t that great to recall many multiple examples of price behavior. You forget rather fast and your brain can meld memories in a way it finds convenient. That is why we look at past market data. It’s hard evidence.
This does not obviate the need to look at live market data, which is also important as we develop ideas. As a matter of fact I think it’s perfectly fine to experiment sometimes with trading ideas live (trading in small size, of course), just to get the creative stimulus going.
But here is a great quote from Bob Volman’s second book:
“…please recall that all of the foregoing can only offer a platform for further trader development. By and large, success as a trader will be a direct function of one’s willingness to study price action on hundreds if not thousands of charts, available at the push of a button in an decent charting package. For the evidence is clear: the markets are not particularly forgiving to those who take their education too lightly or deem themselves above it. But the odds are excellent for all parties who embrace a more diligent approach”
Diligence, a key word here.
..and in his first book:
“…a trader’s education never stops. Even when taking a serious liking to the method offered in this book, the necessity of countless hours of studying, testing, and verifying on historical as well as current charts should be taken to heart.”
Jack Schwager said it wisely that “there are a million different ways to trade, but all of them are hard to find”. How do you deal with things that are difficult? Be diligent.
There's a problem with this.When dilettantes get criticized they get defensive. When professionals-in-training get criticized, they take the constructive criticism with humility and get to work.
Because if you don’t have capital you don’t have a business
all the information is available to everyone
so where is your edge
i cannot forget top step i cannot forget trading.If you lack capital, forget TopStep
yeah with 100 usd capitalYou like trading breakouts?