To be a successful trader, you should not ….

Discussion in 'Trading' started by Tarzan, Aug 8, 2021.

  1. the main thing is not to fall into the hands of scammers, everything else already depends on the trader himself and his decisions
     
    #41     Aug 14, 2021
  2. yc47ib

    yc47ib

    I do all in the list. I am consistantly profitable for over 1.5 decades. The key point is to know what time frame you are trading, and if it does not pan out, what timeframe you are moving up to, and if all the unlikely events happening against you, what risk you are taking relative to your portfolio/account size.
     
    Last edited: Aug 14, 2021
    #42     Aug 14, 2021
  3. mrrvogl

    mrrvogl

    I find the people most opinionated about do's and don'ts in trading are the least knowledgeable, and most inexperienced.

    I'm a full time trader since Jan 2019, consistently profitable and earn my living from trading after applying thousands of hours into the market and thousands Into learning. I still have a lot to learn, but one thing I do know is what works for one trader doesn't for another, everyone has to find what works for them. There are no hard and fast rules, although generally speaking some things are likely to get you in trouble.

    1)Some of my best trades have been premarket on fresh news, being early on a parabolic. Especially since 2020/2021, we have a lot more volume in the market. In 2019 a lot of volume premarket on small caps was 4mil, now 20mil is common. Very easy to get in any out of liquid premarket trades.

    2) I personally don't like trading afternoons, power hour or after hours, unless a stock has been in play all day and continues. GME for example had amazing moves after hours after Musks tweet. The reason I don't like afternoons, is I find the market choppier, most people that made money are gone for the day so you get a lot of emotional chop. I don't like giving back or giving myself the potential to go red in afternoons because odds are I won't have an opportunity to make it back. But plenty of people make money during these times.

    3)again, one of my most profitable trading periods, quick hotkey scalps on the emotional range at open. I used to trade these horribly but stuck with it and usually make 1/2- 2/3's my profit during this time.

    4) my main strategy involves stocks gapping up
    5)jump in plenty of times on a momentum trade and ride for quick profits did that on SPRT just Friday
    6)I don't really understand this. If a stock isn't doing what I expect I will quickly jump out, I don't know if you call it panic because I feel completely comfortable doing this. Trading is emotional, but experience will reign these emotions in. I don't think avoiding emotions, even panic is entirely possible though and some panic is good provided you make the right choice in the panic.
    7)I agree revenge trading is generally a negative, jumping in something just to make back losses while having no edge or setup generally results in bigger losses. I have on occasion revenge trade on actual setups and done quite well though, probably because I'm naturally too conservative in my trading and it unlocks a bit more aggression. Still, overall I prefer to trade as level headed As possible.

    8)depends? Is the market hot and you're firing on all cylinders? Usually I like to make my money premarket and first 30 mins to an hour of the day and walk, but if the market is going nuts I'll trade until the setups are gone. If I start chopping around then usually a sign to walk.
     
    #43     Aug 14, 2021
  4. KCalhoun

    KCalhoun

    Outstanding points -- very spot-on, one of the best and most correct posts I've seen in a long time.

    Totally right re time of day insights, A+ and important. 2 key words I focus on are volatility and range. Anyways, kudos.
     
    #44     Aug 14, 2021
    mrrvogl likes this.
  5. 777

    777

    There are not a lot of successful day traders anymore because of algos, unfavorable rules allowing things like adverse selection, etc.

    However, most of the big winners specialise in trading the open and from time to time look to do all of the first five.

    You have NO understanding of trading but seem sincere, so:

    Try to develop a relationship with a strong trader who currently wins, and add value to their life.

    You want to be around people who are better than you.
    ______

    You probably can not do what I wrote, but this should be your goal.

    ______
    .
    Avoid gurus-for-hire. They are mostly hustlers who used to win or never won.
     
    #45     Aug 14, 2021
    KCalhoun and cobco like this.
  6. here you also need to understand that not all traders are the same, we are all different, and the understanding of the work is also different, if someone is superfluous to overtrade, then it will be a thrill for another
     
    #46     Aug 30, 2021