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Saturday, November 26, 2011

The Skills Traders Need To Acquire by Peter Bain

Each individual trader creates his own experience of the markets based on this picking and choosing process and the decisions that result. If you accept this concept as valid, then the implications are that you will never have a valid reason to blame the markets for your unsatisfying results. The markets don't owe you anything (regardless of how hard you work to be successful) because every other trader participating is doing so to take your money away. You and you alone are completely responsible for whatever you end up with. The sooner you accept that responsibility (if you haven't already), the easier it will be to identify what skills you need to learn to interact with the markets more successfully. Even if you can't identify the mental components responsible for what you ended up with, at least by assuming that you are responsible, you will be opening yourself up to find out.

Nine Skills To Be Acquired:

1. Learning the dynamics of goal achievement so you can stay positively focused on what you want, not what you fear.

2. Learning how to recognize the skills you need to progress as a trader and then stay focused on the development of those skills, instead of the money, which is merely a by-product of your skills.

3. Learning how to adapt yourself to respond to fundamental changes in market conditions more readily.

4. Identifying the amount of risk you are comfortable with, your "risk comfort level", and then learn how to expand it in a way that is consistent with your ability to maintain an objective perspective of market activity.

5. Learning how to execute your trades immediately upon your perception of an opportunity.

6. Learning how to let the market tell you how much is enough, instead of assessing the potential from your personal value system of how much is enough.

7. Learning how to structure your beliefs to control your perception of market movement.

8. Learning how to achieve and maintain a state of objectivity.

9. Learning how to recognize "true" intuitive information and then learning how to act on it consistently.
From "The Disciplined Trader", Mark Douglas

Peter Bain is the Internet's #1 Forex coach and mentor. He is famous for his unique ability to uncover new and innovative ways to harness the power of the Forex. Peter has long been known for his passion for commodity and currency trading. Peter learned trading in the early days of his career from some of the top traders in trading houses. Over the years, he has developed his instincts for a simple yet powerful trading system based on his Pivot Program, which has been continuously refined over the years. His system is the same system used by many trading houses today. For more information, please visit http://www.forexmentor.com

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Why Traders Overtrade by Peter Bain

Ari Kiev suggests a few possible explanations in his book "Trading to Win". Some traders may overtrade just to gain some sort of involvement. They can't sit still and do nothing. It's as if they think, "An active trader trades all day."

If you hold this belief, you will tend to feel you are missing out on something if you stand aside and do nothing. Other traders try to reach high performance goals, and feel that unless they make trade after trade, they have no chance of reaching them.

Professional institutional traders, for example, must make profits to stay employed. Sitting around doing nothing doesn't make them think they can make a profit. When you fail to reach your performance objectives, there's a powerful motive to make trades just to feel you are making some progress.
What often happens, however, is that bad trades are made and losses are mounted. In addition, while one is engaged in these losing trades, he or she is not searching for solid, high probability setups. In the end, profits objectives are missed completely.

Personality may be an issue for some traders. Traders with an impulsive temperament may crave the excitement that excessive trading brings. While others may overtrade to cope with a general frustration they feel in their lives. For them, putting on trades is like playing the lottery - every trade brings hope of success and fulfillment.

Dr. Brett Steenbarger in his book "The Psychology of Trading" suggests that overtrading may be the result of daydreaming. Traders want to have a feeling of power and control, but the markets are difficult to control. Daydreams allow a fearful trader to feel powerful. Dreaming that you will make huge winning trades allows them to feel better. But many times, traders start believing their daydreams. And when daydreams start to seem believable, they may wrongly believe that all they have to do is put on trades and they will be profitable in the end. Even though commissions are relatively low these days, you can still end up paying unnecessary commission costs by overtrading. In addition, some of those small, seemingly insignificant trades can become significant if you lose perspective and invest too much money on a trade that is a bad idea.

One of the best solutions to overtrading is to be brutally honest with yourself. Evaluate your trading ideas and make sure that you have sound reasons for putting on a trade. It's useful to develop and trade very detailed trading plan. You must have a written plan that defines all aspects of your trading, and you must commit to following that plan to the letter.
  • Define your criteria for entering and exiting trades as precisely as possible.
  • Identify the signals or indicators you will use to monitor the trade, and anticipate which indicators will signal when a trade is going against you.
If you have a trade going against you, the solution is very simple, get out because you can always get back in. Never let a loser get out of hand. As traders, we must accept the fact that losses are to be expected.

If you trade good setups with a confluence of events, and avoid making trades on impulse, you'll increase your profits, and feel good about how you are productively using your time to make those profits.

Peter Bain is the Internet's #1 Forex coach and mentor. He is famous for his unique ability to uncover new and innovative ways to harness the power of the Forex. Peter has long been known for his passion for commodity and currency trading. Peter learned trading in the early days of his career from some of the top traders in trading houses. Over the years, he has developed his instincts for a simple yet powerful trading system based on his Pivot Program, which has been continuously refined over the years. His system is the same system used by many trading houses today. For more information, please visit http://www.forexmentor.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Peter_Bain
http://EzineArticles.com/?Why-Traders-Overtrade?&id=539626





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