Planning:
A Key to Successful Trading
Joe Ross
Trading Educators Inc.
http://www.tradingeducators.com/
From time
to time I get some very interesting confessions.
Here is a very recent one, along with a solution.
"Hey
Joe! I had been looking at a profitable trade setup
all day. I studied indicator after indicator looking
for confirmation, even though I know many are correlated
and redundant. But I just kept on searching. I thought,
'Maybe I missed something.' My account is now so
small that I just wanted to be sure that this was
the right trade. My thought was that I must take
into consideration anything and everything that
could cause this trade to fail. I can't afford to
lose any more money. What should I do?"
Well, my
friend, you need to be able to make a decision,
but you can't do it if you are trading undercapitalized
and making your trading decisions out of fear and
uncertainty.
You are
suffering from too much analysis. You are looking
at so many things, you no longer can see straight.
If you keep on over-analyzing your trades, it may
develop into a deep-seated psychological problem.
Carefully
analyzing the possible consequences of your trading
decisions is healthy, but it becomes unhealthy when
it is overdone. When it comes to trading, it's important
to have a clearly defined trading plan. You want
to be sure that any given trade is not going to
wipe out your trading account. That is one of the
reasons we want you to use a time stop in addition
to a money stop. When you use both types of stops
you are clearly defining the signs and signals that
indicate your trading plan is not working, suggesting
that you should close out the trade to protect your
capital.
Trading,
by its very nature, is uncertain. There is little
that can be described as security for traders. Every
trade is a new event, and every entry is an entirely
new business. A trader does not have the luxury
of living from his past accomplishments.
If you have
an unquenchable thirst for certainty, then trading
is not for you. Uncertainty in trading is co-equal
with insecurity. If money represents security to
you, you have a real problem as a trader. Losing
money not only costs you your financial security,
but also your emotional security.
At many
of my seminars and private tutorings I tell people
that I have completely divorced myself from the
money involved in trading. I don't even know until
the end of the month whether I have won or lost.
I trained myself to think of trading as an endeavor
in which I strive to make points. Only later are
those points translated to dollars. In that sense,
for me trading is a game. But I never lose sight
of the fact that trading is also a serious business.
Insecurity
in traders who over-analyze manifests in searching
for the holy grail of trading, desperately seeking
the right indicator or the perfect trade setup.
The problem you're having is that even when you
see something, you are not sure it is sufficiently
perfect for you to act on. Why? Because you lack
confidence in your ability to trade what you see.
Because you lack confidence in yourself. And because
you fear the pain of another loss.
Here's how
I was taught to do my analytical work.
First, I
went through all my charts to get an overview of
the markets. During that time, I looked for trending
markets. Trend lines were placed on the charts as
long as they had a 30° or greater angle. Until
I became used to what that looked like, I used a
protractor to determine the angle. This action got
me used to identifying the trend. These days it
is easily done with your software.
Next, I
went through all my charts again looking for "against
the grain" moves-the intermediate trend that went
against the longer term trend. This alerted me to
markets that might soon resume trending.
Then I went
through all my charts looking for Ross hooks™.
I marked each hook with a bright red "h". Then,
in light of the size of my margin account, I tried
to select those markets that appeared to have the
greatest potential, and I placed order entry stops
just above or below the hooks. These were resting
orders in the market. I tried to never miss a hook.
I phoned my orders in daily.
How did
I know which markets had the greatest potential?
The answer is simple. I selected those markets that
had the strongest trend lines.
Now there
was a trick to this. I didn't want too steep an
angle, because in a rising market that often signals
that the end of a move is near. Markets that break
out too fast and go straight up rarely give an opportunity
for entry before they start to chop around in congestion.
Markets that have been going up at a steady angle,
and suddenly that angle steepens-goes parabolic,
are giving a warning that the move may soon be over.
In down
markets I was willing to allow a steeper angle,
because often a market will move down a lot faster
than it moved up.
What I most
wanted was trending markets that were making a retracement.
Then I could attempt an entry as the market retraced,
when it reached the proximity of the trend line,
and then seemed to resume its trend, and when it
took out the Ross hook™ created by the retracement.
Sometimes
I had to wait for weeks before the markets started
trending. The same is true today; nothing has changed
other than that intraday it can happen a lot sooner.
There will usually be at least a couple of markets
in that condition, but there are times when there
are none.
Yet I did
my homework every day. The only way to know when
an important breakout, the beginning of a trend,
would occur, was to perform my daily analytical
work.
Finally,
I would set my work aside and take a break for dinner.
After dinner, when my head had cleared a bit, I
would look at my charts again. I would then do my
best to come up with a trading plan. I would try
to think through what I was going to do. I would
ask myself a million "what if's." I tried to anticipate
what might happen in the market.
Often that
kind of thinking would cause me to eliminate some
of my potential trades. Also, a second look at times
resulted in "why didn't I see this before?"
For instance,
what if you look at a market that is approaching
its trend line. Isn't it reasonable to ask yourself,
"If this market breaks the trend line, what would
I do?" Ask yourself how such an event would change
the picture. If you had a position, would you still
want to hold it? If you had no position, would this
cause you to take a position opposite what was the
trend? If it would, then why not place an order
entry stop with limit, just the other side of that
trend line? Very often, when prices approach a trend
line from what has been a trending channel, they
are already in a counter trend within the channel.
That means a breakout of the trend line would be
a continuation of this newly formed trend.
Finally,
I would put my work aside and go to bed. In the
morning I would look at my charts once again. Then
I would write out scripts for the orders I wanted
to place.
I would
rehearse how authoritatively I was going to give
these orders.
I did all
this and more before I entered a trade. But do you
know what most traders do? They do their analysis
after the trade is made. Too often, they do it when
the trade is already going against them.
How many
times have you entered a trade, and then said to
yourself, "Oh no, why didn't I see that before?"
How could you have seen it if you hadn't looked,
and looked again, and thought about it, and then
perhaps looked one more time?
Also, many
traders do their analysis after entering the trade
in search of a justification for having entered.
"Now I'm in the trade, let's see if I can find
out a couple of good reasons as to why!"
If you want
to be a successful trader, you have to be hard.
Hard on yourself and hard on your broker. I don't
mean that you have to be a rat, or be impolite,
or be contemptuous. You just have to be firm in
all that you do. You can't afford to be "Mickey
Mouse" about the way you do things. This is a business;
you must be businesslike in conducting your affairs.
As a business
person, you must manage your business. One of the
main functions of management is planning. You have
to plan your trades. Other things to look for as
you go through your charts are: One-two-three formations,
cups with handle, matching congestions, reversal
bars, and Doji's. These should all be part of your
plan.
Some people
give more thought to choosing which flavor ice cream
to eat than to which market to enter and how and
when to do it.
By not taking
the time for preparation, you end up not having
enough time to weigh the pros and cons or really
familiarize yourself with what you are getting into.
You don't
have time to realize that prices have supported
two ticks away from your entry about forty times
in the past. You don't have time to see that you
are trading right into overhead selling. You don't
have time to notice that if prices break out of
yesterday's high, they will also probably take out
a Ross hook. You don't have time to see where prices
are in relation to the trend line. You don't have
time to really grasp the overall trend, or the wave
that is going counter trend. You don't have time
to really consider where you will place your stop.
You don't have time to read the market and to see
what it might be telling you.
All of these
things can be done ahead of time. If you do not
do your homework, you will end up chasing markets
in a desperate attempt to get into "the big move."
Joe
Ross
Trading Educators Inc.
www.tradingeducators.com
Joe Ross, trader, author,
trading educator is one of the most eclectic traders
in the business. His 50+ years include position
trading of shares, and futures. He daytrades stock
indices, currencies, and forex. He trades futures
spreads and options on futures, and has written
books about it all - 12 to be exact. Joe is the
discoverer of The Law of Charts™, and is famous
for the Ross hook™ and the Traders Trick Entry™.
(© by Joe Ross Re-transmission of reproduction
of this material is strictly prohibited without
the prior written consent of Trading Educators,
Inc.)
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