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Previously on "Warning to all dirty spekulants (sp)"
Prices tend to move in response to external events c.f. the nose dive of Jan Crude on release of the US stock figures. Is there anywhere where you can see what news is due for release on a particular day?
From my time working tech support on trading floors I know all the traders have access to Bloomberg etc and assorted other news feeds. Where do the armchair spekulants get their info, or are people just flying blind?
Prices tend to move in response to external events c.f. the nose dive of Jan Crude on release of the US stock figures. Is there anywhere where you can see what news is due for release on a particular day?
From my time working tech support on trading floors I know all the traders have access to Bloomberg etc and assorted other news feeds. Where do the armchair spekulants get their info, or are people just flying blind?
What I meant with this one was don't get greedy after you have hit your target, hanging on in the hope of bigger gains and risking losing the profit you already have.
The phrase you're looking for is trailing stop-loss
No - Plan your profit targets before you take the trade. Do not deviate from the plan. Closing trades early means you mess up the ratio of risk to reward
What I meant with this one was don't get greedy after you have hit your target, hanging on in the hope of bigger gains and risking losing the profit you already have.
So, from what I can make out so far the way to do it is :
Pick a market you are comfortable being able to track. yes
Don't bet more than you can afford to lose. yes
Have a plan and stick to it. yes
If the plan doesnt work, stop and re-evaluate. Dont try and change it on the fly. yes
Dont get greedy, profit is profit, dont be afraid to close out earlier rather than later. No - Plan your profit targets before you take the trade. Do not deviate from the plan. Closing trades early means you mess up the ratio of risk to reward
Make sure your stop losses will only be a small percentage of your total available funds. yes, maximum 2%.
If the market breaks against you dont try and follow it, stop and wait for it to stabalise again. yep, dont chase the market
Not that I've ever tried it, this is all hypothetical and based purely on observation.
Another point. Choose a strategy that either has high reward to risk ratio or a higher than 50% win/loss ratio.
Finally, remember... the market can remain irrational for longer than you can remain solvent
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