1. Educate Yourself
Those who put the work
into it, who strive to trade with method and discipline, are the
ones who
are consistently
successful in the long run. It is very important to start with a
solid foundation of
method before you risk
your portfolio.
2. Create realistic goals and a concrete
plan of how to achieve them
You are setting yourself up
for dissappointment if you jump into trading with no experience
or
education, and
unrealistic expectations. Whether you are trading as a career or
a part-time
endeavour, it is
helpful to see it as a business. That means starting out with a
business plan,
setting conservative
goals, and figuring out exactly what is needed to achieve them.
3. Keep an accurate and thorough journal
of your trading
By keeping accurate records of your
trading habits, it becomes a wonderful tool for looking back in
objective reflection. Looking
for common denominators in good and bad trades will help pin-point
your strengths and weaknesses,
and find which types of trades work best for you. The more
thorough the journal is, the
better a tool it becomes.
4. Trade on paper only, until your system
is 90% correct
Learn, experiment, and make your
initial mistakes on paper only. Make sure your system is accurate,
consistent, and can change
with the market before you risk your portfolio.
5. Begin trading live with a very
small number of shares
One of the biggest problems with
trading is that it looks easier than it is. Once your paper-trading
is accurate, your education
has not ended, but has instead moved on to a more difficult stage,
because now is when emotions
set in. Take it slowly, cautiously, conservatively and build good
habits first with small
shares.
6. Arm yourself with adequate trading tools
You can not effectively
daytrade without the necessary tools to compete in today's fast
markets.
This starts with a reliable
and fast internet connection, a properly functioning computer system,
accurate market data, and
a direct access broker.
Making commission
costs your only criteria for finding a broker may very well cost
you much
more than you save
in the long run. The speed of executions, confirmations, availability
and
willingness to help when
you have questions and problems are of utmost importance and will
go a
very long way in saving you
from losses due to broker errors, delays, and misunderstandings.
7. Safety first, potential second
One key to trading consistently is
to pay close attention to total risk. Learn to recognize and avoid
high-risk situations, regardless
of the potential. Small consistent gains add up to much more in
the
long run than large high-risk
gains accompanied by huge losses. The turtle won the race.
8. Separate method from hope
Base your trading on solid methods and
strategies, predictability and patterns, education and
research, not on hope or guessing.
Trade what you actually see happening, not what
you would
like to happen, or think should
happen.
9. Learn to admit and react quickly when you
are wrong
Whether or not you can keep stops will
determine your ultimate success or failure at trading. Ninety
percent of your losses can
come from 5% of your trades. It is very important to be aware of
this
early and give it your full
focus to avoid forming bad habits. Keep your ego in check.
10. If you are losing, do not continue until
you know why
If you are losing, things will not get
magically better by continuing on the same path. Back up and
re-evaluate before proceeding.
If you need help, ask! That is what we are there for.
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