Do you commit any of the 7 Deadly Trading Sins?
1) Too Much Size
2) Lifting Stops
3) Chasing
4) Jumping the Gun/Overtrading
5) Adding to Losers
6) Counter-Trend
7) Revenge Trading
-Courtesy of Slapshot from another thread
I've read a lot of the books about day/swing/short-term trading. A lot of it is repetitive. A lot of it tells you longwindedly what Slapshot summorized so proficiently for us above. I've had many mentors and training, including the fortunate experience of having met Leo Melamid himself on several occasions. I know this is going to sound wacky, but, after 20 years I find the ability to trade is a constant struggle from within. I have no system. I don't believe that a signal line or momentum swing is all I need to make a decision. Gut alone is not it either. Taking in all of the news/indcators/feel/flow/trend etc... and sucking it up and quickly admitting when I'm wrong are the reasons for my success. I have a (very) similiar set of rules to slapshots that I review daily. I go over my trading day at the end with a chart and where I entered and exited and can almost always point to one of my rules that was broken for bad trades. Money management, diligence (adherence to rules), pressing when I'm up and not down, going against common opinion (if possible without violating rules) are what I focus on.
1) Too Much Size
2) Lifting Stops
3) Chasing
4) Jumping the Gun/Overtrading
5) Adding to Losers
6) Counter-Trend
7) Revenge Trading
-Courtesy of Slapshot from another thread
I've read a lot of the books about day/swing/short-term trading. A lot of it is repetitive. A lot of it tells you longwindedly what Slapshot summorized so proficiently for us above. I've had many mentors and training, including the fortunate experience of having met Leo Melamid himself on several occasions. I know this is going to sound wacky, but, after 20 years I find the ability to trade is a constant struggle from within. I have no system. I don't believe that a signal line or momentum swing is all I need to make a decision. Gut alone is not it either. Taking in all of the news/indcators/feel/flow/trend etc... and sucking it up and quickly admitting when I'm wrong are the reasons for my success. I have a (very) similiar set of rules to slapshots that I review daily. I go over my trading day at the end with a chart and where I entered and exited and can almost always point to one of my rules that was broken for bad trades. Money management, diligence (adherence to rules), pressing when I'm up and not down, going against common opinion (if possible without violating rules) are what I focus on.