Wednesday, September 30, 2020
Why You're Having Trouble Getting To The Next Level Of Trading Success
Sunday, September 27, 2020
What Settings Do You Use For Your Technical Indicators?
Monday, September 21, 2020
How To Identify Market Strength And Weakness In Real Time
Friday, September 18, 2020
One Tough Question To Ask About Your Development As A Trader
If you trained as hard for your sport as you currently train to improve your trading, what would be your odds of making the team?
Reviewing markets, reading about markets, talking to people about markets: all those might be helpful, but they are not training to improve your trading. What are you doing to actually train for improved performance?
As the most recent three-minute trading coach video suggests, we become what we do daily. That is how we reach our trading psychology and trading goals.
Perhaps traders run into problems in their trading simply because they are out of shape. Without the training that pushes us to use it, we tend to lose it.
The Three Minute Trading Coach
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Tuesday, September 15, 2020
Relative Volume: How Much Opportunity Is In The Market Today?
Monday, September 14, 2020
Free Group Coaching and Mentoring at Traders Summit
Sunday, September 13, 2020
What Is The Psychology Of Other Traders In The Market?
Friday, September 11, 2020
Tools To Improve Market Timing From John Ehlers
Wednesday, September 09, 2020
What Goes Into A Perfect Trading Psychology?
1) Planning - Think of an elite boxer going into the ring with a plan; a football or basketball team that plans for an opponent; a surgeon that plans the procedure; a military unit with a battle plan. Wherever we see high level performance, we see evidence of extensive, detailed planning. The ideal mindset for the trader, like for the entrepreneur, is focused on a plan and its execution.
2) Focus - Without a plan, there is nothing to focus upon that is within our control. It's not enough to have a plan; we also have to be laser-focused on that plan so that we can implement it automatically, as the result of considerable repetition. The analogy I often use is that of the military sniper. All focus is directed to the target and the execution of the plan.
3) Calm - An excited mindset is a distracted one. No sniper, no surgeon, no chess grandmaster emotes during a performance. The intense focus on the plan creates a flow state, a sense of being in the zone: total absorption in the task at hand. It is in this flow state that we are best able to discern what markets are doing and respond.
4) Purpose - Before the performance there is a sense of challenge, opportunity, and enthusiasm. The focus is on doing something special, something meaningful, something important. After the performance, there is a sense of accomplishment, appreciation, fulfillment. The elite performer is motivated by purpose and that drives an energized mindset that motivates the calm, focused planning.
Think of the Broadway actor or actress before going on stage. There is anticipation and enthusiasm and the desire to connect with the audience and provide an amazing experience for all. And that drives a complete absorption in the role and on everything that has been rehearsed. It's all about calm focus and being that person you've rehearsed so often in practice. Preparation for trading and going live each day in markets is not so different.
Resources for Trading Psychology
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Sunday, September 06, 2020
What Predicts Success Among Developing Traders?
1) Motivation and passion for trading and succeeding are not predictive of success - Not all who profess motivation are hard workers and not all hard workers work the right ways. Starting out with a drive to make money is, if anything, associated with greater odds of failure and emotional upheaval. There *is* an association between dedicated effort and success (see #2 below), but it's the ability to channel motivation into constructive effort that is key to success. The louder the trader professes passion and motivation, the more I dig to look for substance. I generally come away with very little.
2) The learning that goes on before a trader puts money at risk and the effort that goes into learning when markets are not open are predictive of success - The consistency and intensity of the learning process distinguish those who succeed. The amount of detail in their journals/reviews and the ways in which the reviews build upon one another over time are big predictors of success. Unsuccessful traders take away isolated, fragmented bits of learning from each day and week. Successful traders have a curriculum in mind: they learn in a cumulative, coordinated fashion. True deliberate practice is a significant predictor of success.
3) Innovation is predictive of success - I consistently see successful traders develop multiple ways to profit in markets. They don't look at the same things as everyone else, and they don't think about markets the same way. I recently spoke with a trader who utilizes options structures to trade patterns associated with macroeconomic data releases. Sometimes his trades capture patterns of volatility, sometimes directional patterns, sometimes patterns of relative value. He is playing on a multidimensional chess board, and that provides him with multiple ways of winning.
As Mike Bellafiore and I emphasized in our recent podcast with Tradeciety, success in markets comes in stages: first with learning concepts; then by observing patterns in markets; then by practicing trading and developing consistency in performance; then by sizing up risk and cultivating new sources of edge. A very common source of failure among traders is the temptation to short-circuit this process.
Now here's a key takeaway: It's the quality of the learning process that shapes the positivity of a trader's mindset. A positive psychology does not create success. A positive psychology is the result of focused learning and the exercise of creative problem solving. No amount of self-help exercises will substitute for skill development and the capacity to uncover fresh sources of opportunity. There is a surprising overlap between the qualities of successful traders and the qualities of successful entrepreneurs. Innovation + focus + detailed effort turns dreams into realities.
The Three Minute Trading Coach Video Series
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Friday, September 04, 2020
How To Ride Trending Moves In The Market
A common issue I hear from traders is that, if they miss an initial move in the market or in a stock, they have trouble participating in a potential trend. Indeed, sometimes out of the frustration of missing the initial move, they will find themselves fading it and turning a missed opportunity into an actual loss. Here is one tool I use to trade potential trending (directional) moves in the market and how I use it.
If you click on the chart above, you will see a one-minute chart of the SPX futures (ES; bottom panel) for yesterday's morning session. Plotted above is the NYSE TICK readings, with the zero line highlighted in yellow and a green line providing a five-minute zero-lag moving average. (Chart from Sierra Chart).
What we can see very early in the session is net buying interest (upticking), with the moving average of TICK above the yellow line. Notice, however, that the buying interest is modest and does not result in a higher early move in ES. Then we begin making lower lows in the TICK and lower highs, with the overall distribution of the TICK values falling mostly below the yellow zero line. As that occurs, we can see ES price moving lower. Indeed the bounces in the TICK, representing efforts at market buying, simply cannot be sustained and result in greater selling pressure and now a directional move down in ES.
The key identification is that buying pressure in stocks is waning and, when it occurs, can only move the index to lower price highs. Those modest bounces in TICK are great short-term entries to the downside, allowing us to ride the emerging trending move.
Notice how this approach fits very well with the idea of trading cycles within a trending market: when we get lower price highs with each bounce, those become opportunities to ride the direction downward. The cycles provide us with good risk/reward entries and can be used as opportunistic exits if we're trading around a core position.
Finding the right tools and conceptual frameworks for your trading will not guarantee you a great trading psychology, but it's hard to maintain a constructive mindset without those tools and understandings!
Added 9/4/2020:
For the past year, I have been studying buy and sell signals from common technical trading systems. What I find is:
1) A key is identifying technical indicators that are not highly correlated to each other;
2) A key is tabulating buy and sell signals for all stocks in a universe as your primary measure, not the technical reading for an overall index. This captures the breadth strength referenced in recent posts;
3) When calculated in this way, buy signals and sell signals for each system are not highly correlated at all. This suggests that strength and weakness are independent variables and should not be combined into composite indicators;
4) The edges associated with strength and weakness for different indicators are quite different. Modeling multiple edges without overfitting is a promising source for quant signals.
5) Ultimately our edge comes from looking at things others don't think of and doing a level of work others are not willing/able to undertake.
6) When you've done the hard research and see the edges clearly, that provides a level of confidence that cannot be derived from mere self-help techniques.
Video: Is Trading Your Path To Greatness?
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