I think in your theses there are a lot of accurate hits regarding the general rules of trading. I once had to write an essay on a similar topic, about foreign trade with third world countries, which I published for students on meowessay.com . And the second views very closely intersect with the general established rules, many of them are considered postulates
%% GOOD, GCS. I like ETFs + moving averages myself. Straight lines also======================================================YOU could actually most likely sell that /LOL,
Here is one more rule to make u successful. 1) Back up your data! I went to repair a computer today and the guy had not backed up his data and his hard drive was not detected. It is under warranty so another hard drive was ordered for him, but obviously that hard drive will be blank. I have all my data backed up to a thumb drive but you could also use google drive or another online service. ---- Oraclewizard77 Certified Dell and Lenovo Field Engineer.
1. Plan your trade and trade according to the plan. 2. Hope and fear are the two worst enemies of trade. 3. Record trading results. 4. Maintain a positive attitude regardless of the size of the loss. 5. Constantly set higher trading goals for yourself. 6. Stops are the key to the success of many traders. Limit your losses. 7. A successful trader is one who has been trading for a long time (experience grows). 8. Always take time to study the market. 9. Always set the profit margin for each trade. 10. Never exit the market just because patience is running out, and do not enter simply because you are tired of waiting. 11. Do not remove stop loss while trading. 12. Discipline yourself by following predefined trading rules. 13. Divide your profits in half. Never risk more than 50% of your profits in the market. 14. The market is stronger than me. It is useless to fight the market.
a trader can develop such a list only with work experience, from the very beginning a trader will not even have such a concept
Wrong. Gambling is Trading. Trading is gambling. I'd like to inform you that there exist individuals who list, on their tax return, their occupation as "professional gambler." This is a bonafide IRS designation that meets the requirements of professional business activity in gambling. I think you are confused. You are co-mingling terms. However, there are 4 terms here that you should think in terms of. 1. Professional trader vs. losing (typical)trader and 2. Professional gambler vs. losing (typical) gambler. Professional gamblers and traders face the exact same psychological, probabilistic, and mathematical skills sets they must develop to profit as a business person. Please amend your definitions and thus your incorrect conclusions regarding gambling and trading. It's likely status bias plays a part in your mis-characterizations. Have you read any trading books, particularly New Market Wizards? Why don't you pick up a copy or find one online and see some examples of successful gambler/traders. Take note of the outstanding traders who referred to their ability as gamblers in order to build bankroll. There is a living example of an excellent gambler who also founded a still running deposit prop firm. Can you name him? The primary differences between professional gambling and professional trading are surface in nature : venue, technology infrastructure, perceived status, and fund liquidity (gambling funds are instantly liquid, trading funds are not). The similarities are: strategy, bankroll considerations, plan, money management, taxes, expenses, time period of play.
There are old traders, there are bold traders, but there are no oldboldtraders. So you are a living contradiction on this site. Trading is not gambling. Period. And drop the "professional" tag on any of this. You seem to intimate that only "professionals" make money, and non-professionals lose money. It means nothing.