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jonbig04

Edge VS Mentality

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I don't have a plan I can write down. I don't think I have an edge. I use reasoning that I would if I was shopping in the high street/mall. I still shout at the screen, kick myself occasionally and congratulate myself when I do well. I still make plenty of money though.

 

I trade from years and years of 100+ hour weeks of experience and trial and error. I've tried it all. IMHO, you partly need an edge, you partly need yourself in check and have the right mentality, but most of all, I think you need experience. Once you truly understand what you are watching, realise this is just business (passion for the business helps!) and man up and trade like you would if you had a 'real' job (clock in and clock out), then you are onto a winner.

 

20% (loose) plan, 20% common sense (its a job, do it like any other) and 60% skill, experience and understanding is the right mix.

 

All IMO of course.

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"He's not God" is exactly what I'm saying, you are missing my point. I don't know anything about the guy, but I bet he didn't walk into Enron and they said "Oh here's 500 million dollars"... he started somewhere, just like us. But he can actually execute his strategy on ridiculous sums of money, he didn't cap out at 100k or breaking even. He pushed and pushed and eventually the amount of money he was risking didn't bother him. Ask yourself how you would feel after a down 10 million dollar day. I bet he had to go through it.

 

Contrary to what a lot of people have said I think its that indifference to money that I think makes the difference between a normal trader and someone like Arnold.

 

Trading is a business yes, but its unlike any business that I know of. Yes money is the bottom line, but its the fact that he probably didn't sit around and go "Oh no I have 10 million on this ohhh ahhhh" and pine over and over about it to the point where it affected his judgment probably made him be able to take huge bets and huge losses, and ultimately huge gains.

 

Money holds a distinct power over all of use and I think maybe releasing ourselves from its grip might be the key to large profits. We must respect it of course, but it is not our master. We control our profits and losses, they don't control us.

 

Maybe its this indifference regarding money that makes the difference between $100,000 per year and the 4 million dollars per day this guy can make.

 

Thoughts?

 

 

 

So I was doing more research on Arnold and I found this:

 

"In 2001, when he was 27, he single-handedly made the company $750 million, according to the Houston Chronicle.

In 2000, Arnold was often described by Enron public relations as the person who traded one-third of the natural gas market for the company, Platt's Power Markets Week reported earlier this year.

"He was not afraid of size," said Tom Lord, president of the commodity-markets consultant Volatility Managers and a former Morgan Stanley natural gas trader. "In natural gas markets in the late 1990's, there were probably four or five people willing to do large trades. He was one of them."

 

 

 

Interesting......

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Which brings you back to my earlier assertion:

 

Most people who say that there is nothing psychological about market performance simply haven't traded big enough.

 

I don't know where Arnold's limit will be ... he may be the equivalent of a base jumper and actually have a brain chemistry such that he only ever really feels alive when on the edge of (financial) death.

 

 

Wasp, what you say reflects a heavily discretionary outcome in your evolutionary process as a trader. It might be though that you could write it down if you worked hard enough at that process and then you might discover that it wasn't so much discretionary as unexpressed.

 

IMHO, anyone who is not yet succeeding in trading will have one or both of system issues or psychological issues. And the harder you push it or the less support and training you have the more likely it is that psychological issues will become important. But I do agree with dbPhoenix that most currently losing traders I have seen have not got:

 

A trading system (strategy/method/mech system/whatever) that they have tested sufficiently and can write down sufficiently clearly that there is no ambiguity in their choices about when to enter, what to do while the trade is live, and what to do after the trade is killed. Without that, its very difficult to identify any psychological work that needs to be done --- so in the chicken or egg argument you need the egg (written tested trading process) first.

 

Then you can start to push up through your goals until your genetically and environmentally determined limits are reached and you start to do the psychological work. Chicken time.

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I don't have a plan I can write down. I don't think I have an edge. I use reasoning that I would if I was shopping in the high street/mall. I still shout at the screen, kick myself occasionally and congratulate myself when I do well. I still make plenty of money though.

 

All IMO of course.

 

If I'm correct your trading consists of periods where you follow the markets intensively (you are never longer than 4 hours away from the charts), followed by periods where you don't trade?

 

I'm wondering how it feels to get back "in the zone" after such a long time away from the charts. Even after just a couple of weeks without screen-time, I feel the need to get accustomed to the markets by following price. Even if it's just for two days. I obviously haven't forgotten what it is to trade, and what kind of setups I'm looking for, but if you take a break that lasts several months then the market (volatility is just one factor) might have changed a bit.

 

Don't you have any trouble when you come back after a prolonged period of no-trading? If you have no plan to write down (well you must have an edge otherwise you wouldn't be making money consistently), does that mean you think you wouldn't be able to teach someone else your methods?

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Which brings you back to my earlier assertion:

 

Most people who say that there is nothing psychological about market performance simply haven't traded big enough.

 

I don't know where Arnold's limit will be ... he may be the equivalent of a base jumper and actually have a brain chemistry such that he only ever really feels alive when on the edge of (financial) death.

 

 

Wasp, what you say reflects a heavily discretionary outcome in your evolutionary process as a trader. It might be though that you could write it down if you worked hard enough at that process and then you might discover that it wasn't so much discretionary as unexpressed.

 

IMHO, anyone who is not yet succeeding in trading will have one or both of system issues or psychological issues. And the harder you push it or the less support and training you have the more likely it is that psychological issues will become important. But I do agree with dbPhoenix that most currently losing traders I have seen have not got:

 

A trading system (strategy/method/mech system/whatever) that they have tested sufficiently and can write down sufficiently clearly that there is no ambiguity in their choices about when to enter, what to do while the trade is live, and what to do after the trade is killed. Without that, its very difficult to identify any psychological work that needs to be done --- so in the chicken or egg argument you need the egg (written tested trading process) first.

 

Then you can start to push up through your goals until your genetically and environmentally determined limits are reached and you start to do the psychological work. Chicken time.

 

 

 

Great post. I think we can almost make some very clear assessments now:

 

The majority of traders who quickly blow their accounts most likely didn't put in the work and create a solid well defined and tested plan of which to follow. Those who have said plan and are unable to follow it consistently all the time (I think almost everybody will still have trouble implementing that plan every single time thus this will be a necessary step for everybody) will need to address certain psychological issues that are undermining his trust in himself to actually execute the plan. If you are consistently making money but having trouble raising your investment and thus your profit consistently there are yet still psychological issues to be addressed. After all if you have a well defined method (edge) and you trust yourself to stick to it, nothing should be stopping you from making more and more money with absolutely no limit. The only limit is the one you place on the trust in yourself.

 

 

Agree?

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He couldn't stop Enron collapsing, so i guess JD Arnold isn't God, just another trader, but with more liquidity at his fingertips. Besides, he has a team,...there is no 'I' in team.

 

Tell you what, let's use Nick Leeson, in a conversation about stops.

 

Well now, you might be able to fulfil that desire if you wish, sign up for the forthcoming symposium of Tradeguider (VSA) in Oct, 2008, to be held in ASPEN, Colorado, (only $10K) you would be joining up with professional traders, real smart ones plus many Pshychology Gurus and their Top Guest Speaker to talk about SMART MONEY, Nick Leeson himself;)

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If what you're saying is true than no one would ever make money consistently from trading or investing. That's obviously not the case, and is not what I'm arguing for or against here.

 

 

Slept on it! He's got an edge (Arnold), but, you don't need his 'edge' to make money.

 

Good trading.

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Which brings you back to my earlier assertion:

 

Most people who say that there is nothing psychological about market performance simply haven't traded big enough.

 

I don't know where Arnold's limit will be ... he may be the equivalent of a base jumper and actually have a brain chemistry such that he only ever really feels alive when on the edge of (financial) death.

 

Maybe that's the case but some of use relish big size and only pay attention when the average profit kicks in around 20/30k a trade. Another book cliche that states we should panic, not enjoy. If the percentages are correct and you treat this like what it is, business, then size should be a pleasure, not a fear.

 

Wasp, what you say reflects a heavily discretionary outcome in your evolutionary process as a trader. It might be though that you could write it down if you worked hard enough at that process and then you might discover that it wasn't so much discretionary as unexpressed.

 

IMHO, anyone who is not yet succeeding in trading will have one or both of system issues or psychological issues. And the harder you push it or the less support and training you have the more likely it is that psychological issues will become important. But I do agree with dbPhoenix that most currently losing traders I have seen have not got:

 

A trading system (strategy/method/mech system/whatever) that they have tested sufficiently and can write down sufficiently clearly that there is no ambiguity in their choices about when to enter, what to do while the trade is live, and what to do after the trade is killed. Without that, its very difficult to identify any psychological work that needs to be done --- so in the chicken or egg argument you need the egg (written tested trading process) first.

 

Then you can start to push up through your goals until your genetically and environmentally determined limits are reached and you start to do the psychological work. Chicken time.

 

Ok, yes, I do have a loose outline of a plan but its the screen time and years of experience that tell's me when I am wrong, when I should get out and get in and yes, I could write down 'buy S and sell R' but there are many little factors here and there that are not set in stone is all.

 

For anyone coming to, or, having troubles with their trading, a plan you can write down is vital, but you also need the discipline to hold through all conditions. As for the title of the thread, for those outlined above, I would say it is 50/50. You cannot be successful if you only have half the equation.

 

The longer I trade, the stronger I stand by my opinion that experience is more important than anything. KNOW the market like you know yourself, only then can you really get out the most from it.

 

If I'm correct your trading consists of periods where you follow the markets intensively (you are never longer than 4 hours away from the charts), followed by periods where you don't trade?

 

I'm wondering how it feels to get back "in the zone" after such a long time away from the charts. Even after just a couple of weeks without screen-time, I feel the need to get accustomed to the markets by following price. Even if it's just for two days. I obviously haven't forgotten what it is to trade, and what kind of setups I'm looking for, but if you take a break that lasts several months then the market (volatility is just one factor) might have changed a bit.

 

As for coming back after time away, I always think (this is the only analogy I can use as its the one linked to me), of my bartending days. Once upon a time, a screwdriver was in the toolbox, now, I could make 150 cocktails and shooters without thinking about it. I have not stood the wrong side of a bar for 5+ years now but at any party with more than 3 bottles of liquor I go to, I can make anything for anyone. It's like riding a bike IMO, it is so ingrained into my brain now that I do without really thinking. It may take you a day or two to get back in sync but IMO, once you know what you are watching, and understand what you are watching, its impossible to 'forget'.

 

Taking your 'volatility' example, so what? So the market moves more, that's a good thing, adapt to it and enjoy I say!

 

Don't you have any trouble when you come back after a prolonged period of no-trading? If you have no plan to write down (well you must have an edge otherwise you wouldn't be making money consistently), does that mean you think you wouldn't be able to teach someone else your methods?

 

I have tried for a couple of people but no, they couln't get it down. Why? Partly because I couldn't write it down and partly because its not that simple, nothing ever is. My ability to trade successfully is not (just) because I have a 'plan' and discipline, it is due to years of 6/7 days a week, 20 hours a day with a laptop glued to my hands.

 

Like a F1 driver, yes they have a plan of how to get round a track fastest but they have been doing it for years, they understand the car, the engine, the track and the other racers. If Lewis told you how to get round Silverstone the fastest (brake here, speed up there), would you beat Schumacher?

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Well now, you might be able to fulfil that desire if you wish, sign up for the forthcoming symposium of Tradeguider (VSA) in Oct, 2008, to be held in ASPEN, Colorado, (only $10K) you would be joining up with professional traders, real smart ones plus many Pshychology Gurus and their Top Guest Speaker to talk about SMART MONEY, Nick Leeson himself;)

 

You need to put "professional trader" in quotes if applied to Gavin the Huckster :)

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Which brings you back to my earlier assertion:

 

Most people who say that there is nothing psychological about market performance simply haven't traded big enough.

 

This is a capitalisation issue. Of course a lot of starting traders are under capitalise and/or trade too big. Of course this is likely to produce feelings of anxiety. Knowing the risk of ruin can help. .....Interesting thought, if you experience anxiety/fear when paper trading the issue is unlikely to be fear of financial loss??

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Its not really a capitalization issue (at least not necessarily). There will be a number at which the heart starts to beat. Although this may not be true for psychopaths, base jumpers, and those for whom the money truly is "unimportant."

 

Anxiety when paper trading may be about being wrong or fear that failure in this zone would indicate future failure. In all these things I think that a lot depends on what one invests in each thing; what meanings one assumes; and possibly how it maps to events in ones dim dark past (db's "your father was right -- you are useless.")

 

Although I'm way off my earlier point that one needs both the egg, and then the chicken, to cross the trading road.

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So its safe to say that the difference between people who make money consistently and the people who make BOAT loads of money consistently is psychological. This is what I have really been trying to determine.

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This is a capitalisation issue. Of course a lot of starting traders are under capitalise and/or trade too big. Of course this is likely to produce feelings of anxiety. Knowing the risk of ruin can help. .....Interesting thought, if you experience anxiety/fear when paper trading the issue is unlikely to be fear of financial loss??

 

Blowfish,

 

I disagree with the last sentence. If a noob is "commited" to making trading he/shes occupation. He/she needs to have a healthy fear/anxiety in the first stages of paper trading. This gives him/her sometime to control those fears/anxieties without using real money. I did and it helped me tremendously. If i know how to control it in paper trading i can control it when i go live. Obviously everybody is different. I needed to make everything as real as possible so i fooled myself into thinking my paper account was my real account. Using only 1 contract at a time i could feel the rush of making a trade. This is obviously done after i have my strategy in place :cool: For all beggining traders out there treat paper accounts as if they are real accounts. Thats the only way youre gonna learn without losing "real" money. Use it as a educational tool to prepare yourself for the real world.

 

strtedat22

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So its safe to say that the difference between people who make money consistently and the people who make BOAT loads of money consistently is psychological. This is what I have really been trying to determine.

 

One could also say that the difference between people who lose money consistently and the people who lose BOAT loads of money consistently is also psychological.

 

You seem to be looking for some sort of permission. Is the above question really all that this thread has been about?

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One could also say that the difference between people who lose money consistently and the people who lose BOAT loads of money consistently is also psychological.

 

You seem to be looking for some sort of permission. Is the above question really all that this thread has been about?

 

 

To be honest, I kind of was looking for a sort of permission/consensus. I'm not the kind of person who coasts into something. If I do it, I'm going to do it with all my heart, soul, and mental energy. What I'm attempting to do right now is simply identify WHAT it is that I need to do to accomplish my goal. As you may have guessed my goal isn't to become profitable, or break even (even though those are stepping stones on the way too my goal) my goal is to be the best. Of course I want to make it past the level of traders who lose all their money, but I also want to push past the psychological barriers that seem to keep good traders (profitable) from becoming great traders (ridiculously profitable). That is a step I haven't seen very many traders take, or make an attempt to take. You may say I need to learn to crawl before I can walk and that's true, but if I can identify the problems that will eventually come into play, maybe I can get a head start on correcting them and be damn sure they don't start to form in my own trading or mind. I'm a very analytical person so it help me to break down into separate categories the broad areas which I will need to focus on. Does that make it any easier? Maybe not, but at least I know my focus will be lasered in on the right place. I think that's important, at least for me.

 

 

All day I'm on TL listening to you all and learning what I can, which is great for me and I appreciate it because you all, as traders, have a perspective that I don't. You can teach me things which I can just read and follow as opposed to learning it by expensive trial and error like I'm sure a lot of you did. Believe me, I am taking full advantage of your generosity and appreciate it. But I too have a different perspective because I am not yet a trader. I feel like I can kind of get a birds eye view of what people are getting hung up on so much because as of now I haven't really done anything right, and I haven't really done anything wrong. Maybe, just maybe, it will help me get past or at least identify the problems when they come knocking at my door. Hope that makes sense.

 

 

 

ps I'm reading your book and have a couple hundred thousand questions, I'm hoping I'm not the first idiot to ask them in which case I will be getting to know the search button very well.

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To me this question is simple in that you can give someone a profitable system but they might not have the proper mental framework in order to trade it profitably themselves. On the flip side you can give Sigmond Freud an unprofitable system and it matters not at all what mental framework is being used, if the system is not profitable its not going to make money.

The benefits of a simple system are that its easier to test and its easier to trade in the exact same fashion over and over. The downside is that its not going to be as robust as something more complex. I wouldn't doubt alot of intermediate traders atribute "pyschological problems" to their simple system when it starts to break down during a market regime change when in reality the real problem is that the system is starting to lose its edge.

I personally believe the whole concept of the "holy grail" is a very poor one when it comes to trading. My personal goal is to find as many non random exploitable market setups/conditions as possible in order to add robustness to the overall portfolio of strategies. To me the idea of the "quest for the holy grail" makes one intentionally diminish robustness so that you can't be accused of searching for the "holy grail", it makes no sense.

The biggest problem that I've seen with new traders is simple lack of patience at all levels. No patience to do hard work, no patience to stick around to see a few market cycles, no patience to sift through all the garbage the trading community produces, no patience to learn to program..everyone wants to jump right to proving they are the next Tudor Jones and never take the time to even give themselves a chance.

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But I too have a different perspective because I am not yet a trader. I feel like I can kind of get a birds eye view of what people are getting hung up on so much because as of now I haven't really done anything right, and I haven't really done anything wrong.

We all felt that way. Pretty much everyone who enters trading feels that they will be different, for whatever reason.

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We all felt that way. Pretty much everyone who enters trading feels that they will be different, for whatever reason.

 

 

I think trading itself attracts those who were anomalous in their previous fields. So what you say makes sense. Newbies learning about trading probably automatically assume they will have the same success in trading they did in whatever their previous gig was. The vast majority don't have that same success, but the desire to become an anomaly itself is not what stops them from becoming one. The difference, I think, is that most think that they will rise above the crowd through little or no effort of their own. While some realize that they can achieve the same success in trading, but the odds are even more stacked against them and if they want to get there they will have to MAKE it happen through sheer force of will, hard work, self probing/evaluation and probably a complete over-haul of how they perceive trading.

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Quote from jonbig04 from the similar post on ET (link):

 

One more thing:

 

Ask yourself this. On Monday take your exact strategy and setup, but instead of trading your usual amount imagine you have $10 million on it. Do you act differently? Does it affect you? Think about it honestly. Does it affect you? If so I submit to you that there is mental work yet to be done which is what this thread is about.

 

I know it would affect me haha.

This brings up a good point. Maybe it appears that 80% is psychological because +80% of traders are over leveraged. ;)

If that "$10 million" (I assume it's MY 10 million) was the correct % of my total wealth, I would not trade it differently. If the money was not mine it would depend on how leveraged the lender is and their expectations. The problems people have with scaling (psychological wise) usually comes from not keeping everything even across the board. As for my thoughts on the whole topic...I do believe that there is a decent room for psychology, but I do not feel that it's as high as 80% when you are talking about finding an actual edge (if you remove the highly leveraged gamblers :)).

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Blowfish,

 

I disagree with the last sentence. If a noob is "commited" to making trading he/shes occupation. He/she needs to have a healthy fear/anxiety in the first stages of paper trading. This gives him/her sometime to control those fears/anxieties without using real money. I did and it helped me tremendously. If i know how to control it in paper trading i can control it when i go live. Obviously everybody is different. I needed to make everything as real as possible so i fooled myself into thinking my paper account was my real account. Using only 1 contract at a time i could feel the rush of making a trade. This is obviously done after i have my strategy in place :cool: For all beggining traders out there treat paper accounts as if they are real accounts. Thats the only way youre gonna learn without losing "real" money. Use it as a educational tool to prepare yourself for the real world.

 

strtedat22

 

I think you might have misconstrued what I said :) Firstly it was a question rather than a statement. It was not to discuss the merits of paper trading but to suggest that if you experience emotional responses whilst simming they are unlikely to be simple fear of financial loss. Neither did I comment whether fear was 'healthy' or not. Not being argumentative here just clarifying :)

 

I too tend to paper trade pretty much as I trade for real (for better or worse). However much you have convinced yourself to 'do it as if its real' if you are experiencing anxiety in sim mode this is probably indicative of other issues. Fear has many many manifestations :) Only you will be able to tell whether its 'healthy' or not. At some stage it is likely that most will experience the actual pain of financial loss. Tha isn't going to happen simming. The only way to really experience the 'feeling' of a string of loosing trades (and the attendant drawdown) is actually experience it. But that wasn't my point either really. Sim might (or might not) help sorting out a whole bunch of things without the pain (and fear it tends to foster) of losing money.

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I think you might have misconstrued what I said :) Firstly it was a question rather than a statement. It was not to discuss the merits of paper trading but to suggest that if you experience emotional responses whilst simming they are unlikely to be simple fear of financial loss. Neither did I comment whether fear was 'healthy' or not. Not being argumentative here just clarifying :)

 

I too tend to paper trade pretty much as I trade for real (for better or worse). However much you have convinced yourself to 'do it as if its real' if you are experiencing anxiety in sim mode this is probably indicative of other issues. Fear has many many manifestations :) Only you will be able to tell whether its 'healthy' or not. At some stage it is likely that most will experience the actual pain of financial loss. Tha isn't going to happen simming. The only way to really experience the 'feeling' of a string of loosing trades (and the attendant drawdown) is actually experience it. But that wasn't my point either really. Sim might (or might not) help sorting out a whole bunch of things without the pain (and fear it tends to foster) of losing money.

 

BF,

 

Thanks for clarifying that for me. From my own experience and im sure for alot of other beginners getting started in the realm of trading felt a feeling of anxiety from the get go. I didnt want to lose money while learning the game. I paper traded futures until i could control my anxiety/emotions/greed/fears. Dont get me wrong. I still do lose money but i dont lose my cool :cool:

 

strtedat22

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If you don't have a plan you don't have a plan. If you do have a plan but don't use it, you might as well not have one.

 

Well said tune. Planning is one thing; implementing the plan is another; SUCCEEDING with it is something else.

 

ENJOY!

 

ztrader

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You are right. Making a $100k trading is a great accomplishment, and to the people that do it you get kudos from me. However most people don't get there. You seem to be implying that the 100k trader is simply "paying his dues" and you may be right, but the statistics say over 95% of the time, you're wrong. That trader will usually blow his account, and if he doesn't he will stay in his comfort zone of 100k, trading only the amount of contracts that can handle without losing sleep.

 

Do you know why their is a 95% fail rate in this business? I do. And the reasons are simple:

 

1. New traders are lured by this idea that "this is an easy way to riches." The Market Makers have brilliant Marketing departments and they do a stellar job- believe me I have a B.S. in Marketing and over a decade in the field- I know good marketing. They shoot fish in a barrel.

 

They tout short term trades. They WANT you to scalp for two reasons. One is the more trades you take, the more commissions they make. Secondly, Marketers are trained with psychology- they know what makes you tick- they know people and how they work. They know that even if the long term trend is bull, human nature to a "get rich quick" minded person will take tiny profits out of fear.

 

2. After they have baited you into doing something as silly as opening an account with $250 being as green as an Irish countryside- letting you overleverage the crap out of yourself- they part you of your $250 and hundreds of others. Knowing psychology again, they know that most people with be revengelful- they will fund the account with another $250 and take another crack at it- this time, they have you even MORE by the short and twisty's because you are pissed and want to get your first $250 back. They take you to the cleaners again! The cycle repeats over and over with millions of "get rich quick" greenhorns.

 

3. If after you have blown two accounts, and still want some more- you then set out on your search for the "Holy Grail." You start picking from the list of the 1000 indicators that your broker who just cleaned your clock TWICE gives you. "Must be a gift from the trading gods" you say- "all the answers are right here" you think- so you apply them, try them and eventually get parted from even more money.

 

4. If you are now beaten down for the third time- you can either

A. Keep fighting the good fight and demo trade until you finally get it right

or

B. Give up on the markets all together.

 

5. If you choose A, you will study and learn what the markets are really all about, you will search not for "The Grail" but for the reasons the markets do what they do. You will search to find out how to read a chart instead of trying to take trades when one line crosses another or some Indicator tells you it is time to pull the trigger. You will take the hard road and work long hours to get to an edge. You will make money with your edge, and sometimes you will want to tweak the edge or realize that you can have multiple "edges" to draw money from the market. You will look at the market from a completely different perspective than you did when you started. You know that the market is not "out to get you." The market is there to do what it does- and either you are in harmony with the movements- or you are a dead man walking.

 

The lesson:

This is a hard road, this takes time, this takes patience to learn, this takes dicipline, it takes blood, sweat and tears. During your learning phase you will either crumble and give up, or you will have the heart to plow on ahead. 95%of people fail in this business because they don't have the balls to do what it takes to succeed. They don't have the gumption to fight through the learning stage to make it. PERIOD!

Aaron

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    • A custom Better Daily Range indicator for MT5 is now available on the Metaquotes website and directly in the MT5 platform. https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/103800 The Better Daily Range indicator shows the previous trading day's price range on the current day's chart. Many traders mark out the previous day's high, low, and the current day's open before trading. This is not an average true range indicator (ATR). This is not an average daily range indicator (ADR). This is a daily range indicator (DR). This indicator shows horizontal maximum and minimum range lines. If your broker-dealer's MT5 platform shows Sunday bars, Sunday bars are not included as previous days. In other words, Monday uses Friday's price data (skips Sunday). This indicator also shows two 25% (of range) breakout lines: one that is 25% higher than the maximum range line, and one that is 25% lower than minimum range line. A middle range line is also shown. Immediately after the daily close of your broker-dealer, all five range lines update to the new daily values.   Many traders only trade during times of high volume/liquidity. The Better Daily Range indicator also shows five adjustable time separator lines: A local market open time line (a vertical line), A local market middle time A line (a vertical line), A local market middle time B (a vertical line), A local market middle time C (a vertical line), A local market close time (a vertical line), and A local market open price (a horizontal line). The location of the local market open price depends on your input local market open time. In other words, you input your desired market open time according to your local machine/device time and the indicator automatically shows all five session lines. When your incoming price bars reach your input local market open time line, the indicator automatically shows the price to appear at your input local market open time. If your broker-dealer's MT5 platform shows Sunday bars, the time separator lines do not show on a Sunday. Immediately after midnight local machine/device time, the five session time lines (vertical lines) are projected forward into the current day (into the future hours) and the local open price line is erased. The local open price line reappears when the price bars on the chart reach your input local open time (your local machine/device time).   The indicator has the following inputs (settings):   Chart symbol of source chart [defaults to: EURUSD] - Allows you to show data from another chart symbol other than the current chart symbol. Handy for showing standard timeframe data on an MT5 Custom Chart. Local trading session start hour [defaults to: 09] - Set your desired start hour for trading according to the time displayed on your local machine/device operating system (all times below are your local machine/device operating system times). The default setting, 09, means 9:00am. Local trading session start minute [defaults to: 30] - Set your desired start minute. The default setting, 30, means 30 minutes. Both the default hour and the default minute together mean 9:30am. Local trading session hour A [defaults to: 11] - Set your desired middle hour A for stopping trading when volume tends to decrease during the first half of lunch time. The default setting, 11, means 11:00am. Local trading session minute A [defaults to: 00] - Set your desired middle minute A. Both the default hour and the default minute together mean 11:00am. Local trading session hour B [defaults to: 12] - Set your desired middle hour B for the second half of lunch time. The default setting, 12, means 12:00pm (noon). Local trading session minute B [defaults to: 30] - Set your desired middle minute B. Both the default hour and the default minute together mean 12:30pm. Local trading session hour C [defaults to: 14] - Set your desired middle hour C for resuming trading when volume tends to increase. The default, 14, means 2:00pm. Local trading session minute C [defaults to: 00] - Set your desired middle minute C. Both the default hour and the default minute together mean 2:00pm. Local trading session end hour [defaults to: 16] - Set your desired end hour for stopping trading. The default setting, 16, means 4:00pm. Local trading session end minute [defaults to: 00] - Set your desired end minute for stopping trading. Both the default hour and the default minute together mean 4:00pm. High plus 25% line color [defaults to: Red]. High plus 25% line style [defaults to: Soid]. High plus 25% line width [defaults to 4]. High line color [defaults to: IndianRed]. High line style [defaults to: Solid]. High line width [defaults to: 4]. Middle line color [defaults to: Magenta]. Middle line style [defaults to: Dashed]. Middle line width [defaults to: 1]. Low line color [defaults to: MediumSeaGreen]. Low line style [defaults to: Solid]. Low lien width [defaults to: 4]. Low minus 25% line color [defaults to: Lime]. Low minus 25% line style [defaults to: Solid]. Low minus 25% line width [defaults to: 4]. Local market open line color [defaults to: DodgerBlue]. Local market open line style [defaults to: Dashed]. Local market open line width [defaults to: 1]. Local market middle lines color [defaults to: DarkOrchid]. Local market middles lines style [defaults to: Dashed]. Local market middles lines width [defaults to: 1]. Local market close line color [default: Red]. Local market close line style [Dashed]. Local market close line width [1]. Local market open price color [White]. Local market open price style [Dot dashed with double dots]. Local market open price width [1].
    • A custom Logarithmic Moving Average indicator for MT5 is now available for MT5 on the Metaquotes website and directly in the MT5 platform. https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/99439 The Logarithmic Moving Average indicator is a moving average that inverts the formula of an exponential moving average. Many traders are known to use logarithmic charts to analyze the lengths of price swings. The indicator in this post can be used to analyze the logarithmic value of price on a standard time scaled chart. The trader can set the following input parameters: MAPeriod [defaults to: 9] - Set to a higher number for more smoothing of price, or a lower number for faster reversal of the logarithmic moving average line study. MAShift [defaults to: 3] - Set to a higher number to reduce the amount of price crossovers, or a lower for more frequent price crossovers. Indicator line (indicator buffer) can be called with iCustom in Expert Advisors created by Expert Advisor builder software or custom coded Expert Advisors: No empty values; and No repainting.
    • A custom Semi-Log Scale Oscillator indicator is now available for MT5 on Metaquotes website and directly in the MT5 platform. https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/114705 This indicator is an anchored semi-logarithmic scale oscillator. A logarithmic scale is widely used by professional data scientists to more accurately map information collected throughout a timeframe, in the same way that MT5 maps out price data. In fact, the underlying logic of this indicator was freely obtained from an overseas biotech scientist. A log-log chart displays logarithmic values on both the x (horizontal) and y (vertical) axes, which generally produces a straight line that points up, down, or remains flat. A straight line is not very useful for trading markets because such a straight line is so smoothed that actual price values that appear over time are very far away from the line study. In contrast, a semi-log chart is only logged on one axis--generally, the y axis. Such a semi-log chart is well suited for trading markets because the time (x) axis is preserved in its original form while at the same time, providing a graduated y scale where the distance between price increments progressively increases as price rises higher (and decreases as price falls lower). This allows us to establish a zero level for a low price, clearly view trends on straighter angles, and clearly observe amplified price spikes at high prices. Accordingly, this indicator employs a semi-log scale on the y axis only. This indicator is anchored because it allows you to specify a start time for calculation of price bars. The settings are as follows: Year.Month.Day Hour:Minute - defaults to 1970.01.01 00:01 - if left on default setting, the indicator automatically detects the earliest price bar in chart history--even where the year 1970 is not in history. Notes appear in the indicator settings window. Size of first pip step to log - defaults to 135 - this default is suitable for higher timeframes such a MN1 (monthly), while 5 is suitable for lower timeframes such as M1 (minute). Ultimately, optimal settings will depend on the timeframe that you attach the indicator to, the level of price volatility within that timeframe, and start time that you choose. Remember... The semi-log formula calculates from low to high, so your start time must always be a major swing low. Again, notes appear in the indicator settings window. The standard (built-in) MT5 indicators that can be applied to the "Previous indicator's data" can be applied to this indicator. Indicator lines (indicator buffers) can be called with iCustom in Expert Advisors created by Expert Advisor builder software or custom coded Expert Advisors. The log scale Open, High, Low, and Close prices are buffers: No empty values; and No repainting.
    • A custom Gann Candles indicator is now available for MT5 on the Metaquotes website and directly in the MT5 platform. https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/126398 This Gann Candles indicator incorporates a series of W.D. Gann's strategies into a single trading indicator. Gann was a legendary trader who lived from 1878 to 1955. He started out as a cotton farmer and started trading at age 24 in 1902. His strategies included geometry, astronomy, astrology, times cycles, and ancient math. Although Gann wrote several books, none of them contain all of his strategies so it takes years of studying to learn them. He was also a devout scholar of the Bible and the ancient Greek and Egyptian cultures, and he was a 33rd degree Freemason of the Scottish Rite. In an effort to simplify what I believe are the best of Gann's strategies, I reduced them into one indicator that simply colors your preexisting price bars when those strategies are in-sync versus out-of-sync. This greatly reduces potential chart clutter. Also, I reduced the number of input settings down to only two: FastFilter, and SlowFilter Both FastFilter and SlowFilter must be set to 5 or more, as noted in the Inputs tab upon attaching the indicator to your chart. Gann Candles works on regular time-based charts (M5, M15, M20, etc.) and custom charts (Renko, range bars, etc.). The indicator does not repaint. When using the default settings, blue candles form bullish price patterns, gray candles form flat (sideways) price patterns, and white candles form bearish price patterns. The simplest way to trade Gann Candles is to buy at the close of a blue candle and exit at the close of a gray candle, and then sell at the close of a white candle and exit at the close of a gray candle.
    • A custom Anchored VWAP with Standard Deviation Bands indicator for MT5 is now available on the Metaquotes website and directly through the MT5 platform. https://www.mql5.com/en/market/product/99389 The volume weighted average price indicator is a line study indicator that shows in the main chart window of MT5. The indicator monitors the typical price and then trading volume used to automatically push the indicator line toward heavily traded prices. These prices are where the most contracts (or lots) have been traded. Then those weighted prices are averaged over a look back period, and the indicator shows the line study at those pushed prices. The indicator in this post allows the trader to set the daily start time of that look back period. This indicator automatically shows 5 daily look back periods: the currently forming period, and the 4 previous days based on that same start time. For this reason, this indicator is intended for intraday trading only. The indicator automatically shows vertical daily start time separator lines for those days as well. Both typical prices and volumes are accumulated throughout the day, and processed throughout the day. Important update: v102 of this indicator allows you to anchor the start of the VWAP and bands to the most recent major high or low, even when that high or low appears in your chart several days ago. This is how institutional traders and liquidity providers often trade markets with the VWAP. This indicator also shows 6 standard deviation bands, similarly to the way that a Bollinger Bands indicator shows such bands. The trader is able to set 3 individual standard deviation multiplier values above the volume weighted average price line study, and 3 individual standard deviation multiplier values below the volume weighted average price line study. Higher multiplier values will generate rapidly expanding standard deviation bands because again, the indicator is cumulative. The following indicator parameters can be changed by the trader in the indicator Inputs tab: Volume Type [defaults to: Real volume] - Set to Tick volume for over-the-counter markets such as most forex markets. Real volume is an additional setting for centralized markets such as the United States Chicago Mercantile Exchange. VWAP Start Hour [defaults to: 07] - Set according to broker's or broker-dealer's MT5 server time in 24 hour format. For example, in the New York, United States time zone, 07 is approximately the London, United Kingdom business open hour. VWAP Start Minute [defaults to: 00] - Set according to broker's or broker-dealer's MT5 server time in 24 hour format. For example, 00 is on the hour with no delay of minutes within that hour. StdDev Multiplier 1 [defaults to: 1.618] - Set desired standard deviation distance between the volume weighted average price line study and its nearest upper and lower bands. For example, 1.618 is a basic Fibonacci ratio. Some traders prefer 1.000 or 1.250 here. StdDev Multiplier 2 [defaults to: 3.236] - Set desired standard deviation distance between the volume weighted average price line study and its middle upper and lower bands. For example, 3.236 is 1.618 (above) + 1.618. Some traders prefer 2.000 or 1.500 here. StdDev Multiplier 3 [defaults to: 4.854] - Set desired standard deviation distance between the volume weighted average price line study and its furthest upper and lower bands. For example, 4.854 is 1.618 (above) + 3.236 (above). Some traders prefer 3.000 or 2.000 here. VWAP Color [defaults to: Aqua] - Set desired VWAP line study color. This color automatically sets the color of the start time separators as well. SD1 Color [defaults to: White] - Set desired color of nearest upper and lower standard deviation lines. SD2 Color [defaults to: White] - Set desired color of middle upper and lower standard deviation lines. SD3 Color [defaults to: White] - Set desired color of furthest upper and lower standard deviation lines. Just to clarify, popular standard deviation bands settings are: 1.618, 3.236, and 4.854; or 1.000, 2.000, and 3.000; or 1.250, 1.500, and 2.000. Examples of usage *: In a ranging (sideways) market, enter a trade at the extremes of the standard deviation bands (SD3) and exit when price returns to the VWAP line study. Trade between SD1Pos and SD1 Neg, alternately buying and selling from one standard deviation line to the other. In a trending (rising or falling) market, enter a buy when a price bar opens above the VWAP line study, and exit at the nearest standard deviation band above (SD1Pos). Optionally, repeat the same trade but substitute SD1Pos for the VWAP, and SD2Pos for SD1. Reverse for sell; or Trade all lines (VWAP, SD1Pos, SD2Pos, and SD3Pos) in the same way. Again, reverse for sell. Indicator lines (indicator buffers) can be called with iCustom in Expert Advisors created by Expert Advisor builder software or custom coded Expert Advisors: No empty values; and No repainting.
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