Lots of great ideas here. I agree with a lot said.
A big development for me was learning how to review properly, examine my system, psychology and implementation of that system. You are learning both at the screen and staring at your statement.
1) Know your system
Track all the statistics your prop report tells you, or you are ignoring your report card, and your homework assignments. Everyone will tell you to be process-driven not results-driven and the difference will start to show in these numbers first before your P&L. The numbers don't lie about your trader profile, and are invaluable to isolating your issues. Is your W/L under 2? You are not lettin em run my man.
2) Know your psychology
Understand your individual makeup, what suits you, and what mistakes you are given to. Don't repeat the mistakes. You'll have to keep track of the ones you're making, and try to understand what keep making that happen. Remember, losses aren't just a business expense to a Trader, they are a very real learning opportunity THAT YOU PAY FOR to develop your system, psychology and sense of the market (especially for the beginning trader). Stopped out according to the program? Good trade. Lesson not learned, history repeating itself? that is wasted money. Here's a list of my possible mistakes that I'm tracking (so I won't repeat them):
Holding on to a Loser
Adding to a Loser
TOO MUCH SIZE
Chasing
Large Spread
Too Volatile for my style (including ETFs)
Trading during Announcements
Revenge Trading
Churning (not doing commission cost/benefit)
Trading on P&L
MUST Keep Original Stop
Trading with 1 HOUR Left - I'm terrible at the close
Ignored Gut
Should have sold SOME not All
Impatient.
1 Min Vision - noise on Charts
Poor Entries - Ignoring the range
Hit PT and Took None
DIDNT Stop at Daily PT
Of course I'll still get emotional. And with so many possible I'm still repeating mistakes but now I'm accountable and it's happening less and less.
All this is assuming you have a profitable, backtested paper-traded system to begin with, most of your mistakes will be psychological and related to the rules of your system.
It's all rules based. This is why computers are so good at doing this, and taking over the exchanges quickly. You gotta be like a computer. I have a sticky note: NO DECISIONS, the flowchart is there and you make no real decisions when in the heat of battle like a computer following the rules (setups that qualify perfectly, where's your stop, you gotta have an exit somewhere - you either stick to the plan or you don't). You want to have the same challenges as the algos, deal with psychogical influence in your calibration and preparations but not in the execution of your game plan. Both algo and discretionary traders have to develop and continually tune their systems, when you are doing that with live money you are taking on added risk and losses. Discretionary traders need to beware and use small size or demo accounts when trying to expand their opportunity set because even if you find a place to backtest it, the standard of software available to the retail community is not as robust. Say you're chart reading. Where do you go to backtest a chart pattern? That's tough, but crude info is out there. Getting a system with an edge is not that hard, but running it like an Iceman and watching yourself get shook out constantly in the beginning is.
A big development for me was learning how to review properly, examine my system, psychology and implementation of that system. You are learning both at the screen and staring at your statement.
1) Know your system
Track all the statistics your prop report tells you, or you are ignoring your report card, and your homework assignments. Everyone will tell you to be process-driven not results-driven and the difference will start to show in these numbers first before your P&L. The numbers don't lie about your trader profile, and are invaluable to isolating your issues. Is your W/L under 2? You are not lettin em run my man.
2) Know your psychology
Understand your individual makeup, what suits you, and what mistakes you are given to. Don't repeat the mistakes. You'll have to keep track of the ones you're making, and try to understand what keep making that happen. Remember, losses aren't just a business expense to a Trader, they are a very real learning opportunity THAT YOU PAY FOR to develop your system, psychology and sense of the market (especially for the beginning trader). Stopped out according to the program? Good trade. Lesson not learned, history repeating itself? that is wasted money. Here's a list of my possible mistakes that I'm tracking (so I won't repeat them):
Holding on to a Loser
Adding to a Loser
TOO MUCH SIZE
Chasing
Large Spread
Too Volatile for my style (including ETFs)
Trading during Announcements
Revenge Trading
Churning (not doing commission cost/benefit)
Trading on P&L
MUST Keep Original Stop
Trading with 1 HOUR Left - I'm terrible at the close
Ignored Gut
Should have sold SOME not All
Impatient.
1 Min Vision - noise on Charts
Poor Entries - Ignoring the range
Hit PT and Took None
DIDNT Stop at Daily PT
Of course I'll still get emotional. And with so many possible I'm still repeating mistakes but now I'm accountable and it's happening less and less.
All this is assuming you have a profitable, backtested paper-traded system to begin with, most of your mistakes will be psychological and related to the rules of your system.
It's all rules based. This is why computers are so good at doing this, and taking over the exchanges quickly. You gotta be like a computer. I have a sticky note: NO DECISIONS, the flowchart is there and you make no real decisions when in the heat of battle like a computer following the rules (setups that qualify perfectly, where's your stop, you gotta have an exit somewhere - you either stick to the plan or you don't). You want to have the same challenges as the algos, deal with psychogical influence in your calibration and preparations but not in the execution of your game plan. Both algo and discretionary traders have to develop and continually tune their systems, when you are doing that with live money you are taking on added risk and losses. Discretionary traders need to beware and use small size or demo accounts when trying to expand their opportunity set because even if you find a place to backtest it, the standard of software available to the retail community is not as robust. Say you're chart reading. Where do you go to backtest a chart pattern? That's tough, but crude info is out there. Getting a system with an edge is not that hard, but running it like an Iceman and watching yourself get shook out constantly in the beginning is.

