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Day Trading Rules to Live By

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Most people looking to make money in the markets believe that the answer lies in finding some simple technical analysis strategies that will catapult them to profitability.

The truth is that trading is not as simple as beginners believe. It is a profession, and like any profession it requires a learning curve. Reading a book or getting a few simple “tips” is not going to turn you into a professional trader.

After studying for a length of time, it’s not uncommon for students to begin their search for the “holy grail.”

They search for more indicators, chart patterns, gurus, alert services or the latest secret day trading strategies and other things that will provide their answer to becoming successful.

But here’s the fact. Success lies within you .. and it won’t come easy.

In fact, one of my favorite success principles is this:

“Successful people do what unsuccessful people are unwilling to do.”

Let’s apply this to trading in the form of my list of “Day Trading Rules to Live By” … all of which have to do more with you than with the market.

The consistency you need is in your mind, not in the market. Many in the market get frustrated because the market often behaves differently than they expect. You can’t rely on the market to be consistent. It is largely a random walk. But there are times when the market does setup with a probability scenario that gives you an edge. Your job is be consistent in trading those probability setups and trade them every time they occur.
Trade like a cat. Most beginners over trade. It’s one of the most common trading sins. Your job is to be better than other day traders in having the discipline to wait like a cat in the brush until just the right moment (your high probability setup) and then jump on the trade without hesitation.
Successful trading is simply a game of not making mistakes. Keep a list of your day trading rules posted on the wall or on your monitor and then follow those rules perfectly. You must be more disciplined than the average trader. Never depart from your rules no matter how good a trade “looks” or “feels” to you if it violates your objective and back-tested rules.
Only trade when you are in an optimal emotional state. Never trade when you are tired or are in an emotionally unstable situation (after a fight with a spouse or friend for example). Day trading is more like athletics than academics. Trading on such a short time frame requires you to be able to make split second decisions, and you’re risking a lot of money when you do. Make sure your mind is sharp and your emotions are centered.
Keep a detailed trading log. Every day trading course I’ve seen has a trading log. Yet my experience in dealing with trading students demonstrates that less than 10% of them actually use it. This is a huge mistake. Not only should you log every trade, but you should also record how you felt and what you were thinking as you took the trade. In this way your logs will become a type of “biofeedback” mechanism for you. Personally, this was the difference that made all the difference for me.

These 5 day trading rules are not the type of rules that you were probably looking for. The masses want rules about indicators, price bars, where you get in and where you get out.

Granted, you definitely need clear objective rules about those things as well. Yet thousands of traders have those types of rules, and yet continue to fail because those rules are about market action.

They fail because they don’t have, or don’t follow, the more important rules the rules about their own action.

If you find yourself resisting the importance of these rules about your own behavior, realize that you are one of the masses who feels the same way. But since the masses fail at day trading, you must set yourself apart and do something different than them.

Following these 5 day trading rules are what the retail traders fail to do. Not because they can’t do them, but because they are unwilling to do them. And remember, “Successful people do what unsuccessful people are unwilling to do.”

Dr. Barry Burns is the owner of Top Dog Trading which teaches people how to avoid the long learning curve in day trading

He started his study of the markets under the direction of his father, Patrick F. Burns, who became independently wealthy through trading and had over 70 years of trading experience before passing away in 2005.

He has been the featured speaker at DayTradersUSA, and developed a 5 Day Course for WorldWideTrders.

Dr. Burns has been a headlining guest speaker for the Market Analysts of Southern California, given seminars around the country at many Wealth Expos as well as many Traders Expos, been interviewed on the Robin Dayne “Elite Masters of Trading” Radio Show, and is the former moderator of the FuturesTalk chat room.

He has a doctorate in Hypnotherapy and is a certified NLP practitioner, and therefore able to help people with the psychology of trading.

Day Trading Styles

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There is no foolproof way to profit in day trading. The majority of the people who enter this trade come with only fundamental knowledge to start with which provided general guidelines for their initial decisions. But as they learn the techniques of day trading, they begin to develop their own systems that work based on the different day trading styles.

There are several kinds of styles involved in this trade. Some of them are as follows:

Swing Trading – Developed during the 1900′s, swing trading is a style that adheres to forecasting the succeeding behaviors of the market based on the swing it followed during previous trades. While day trading is described as a trade that is normally held with a maximum of one day, a swing trade could make up anywhere from a day to several weeks. This trade works on the principle that changes the behavior in the market could only yield significant profits if held over a certain period of time.

One of the advantages that swing trading has is that it can give good chances for traders to take advantage of the constant, or at least predictable movements of the market.

Momentum Trading – After its unpopularity before the 90′s, momentum trading came back to the scene due to the lively market during this period. The main appeal of this style is that it lets the traders hold their positions overnight with minimal risks. Momentum traders basically jump over to the stocks that are moving upwards and try to ride the momentum until they reach their desired profit. They jump out of the trade at the fist sign of losing.

Technical Trading – One style of trading that is based purely on charts, index graphs, and the likes is technical trading. This style is broader in perspective and approach. Technicians base their decisions on the history of trades, the indicators that worked before and the unique patterns which led to good trades in the past. They use these too for finding good solutions for their trades. There is one significant flaw in this style though; there are too much technical indicators that could obscure the judgment of the technician.

Scalp Trading – Maybe the most popular of all trades. Scalp traders are those who make several trades in a day trying to make small profits from each of these trades by exploiting the possibilities they could present. This style is rather safe since the investment is spread out to so many markets that there are too few highly significant losses and gains. However, it often leads to overtrading.

Miodrag Trajkovic is an expert on information related to Day Trading, Day Trading Mistakes, Day Trading Strategies, Online Day Trading and Day Trading Systems. For more information visit his website http://daytrading.explore-me.com

Day Trading Tips Worth Reading

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Are you tired of the same old day trading tips? Like, “cut your losses and let your profits run.” “Never let a gain turn into a loss.”, or the most repeated tip, “Buy low, sell high.”

So how about something new? Let me give you some specific day trading tips that will turn your trading around.

A good defense beats a good offense over the long haul. If you want to stay in the Trading “game”, then developing a good defense is a MUST.

Rule Number One: Cut your losses immediately when the trade doesn’t go your way. There’s nothing harder to learn and nothing better. I’ll be even more specific. The average “run of the mill” day trading advisor will tell you to enter a trade, place a stop of 2 to 4 points, place a target that’s equal to your stop, or 2 to 3 times greater, and then wait for your stop to get hit. This is a big mistake that is going to end up costing *you*.

The time to wait is before you enter the trade, not after.

I’ve been trading for over 27 years, and I don’t trade like the crowd. The crowd waits for their stops to get hit. They sit there hoping their trade comes back from negative to positive territory, but it usually doesn’t and they lose money. They believe that the edge (probability of success) isn’t good enough on their entries. This is the crowd’s approach and it just doesn’t work.

My day trading advice for you is to use radical soft stops that go against human nature.

I write a market newsletter each day, giving my “game plan” for the next trading day. I’m as specific as possible including Support and Resistance levels that I will be buying and selling against, which provides *you* with great trade set ups nearly everyday.

In trading, your entries and your exits must NOT come naturally at first. Human nature is responsible for the fact that 90% of those day trading the eminis lose money. If you follow the herd, you’ll lose money too.

Some of my subscribers tell me it seems impossible to get out of a trade early, just because it doesn’t move immediately into a profit. They worry about commissions. They worry that the trade will turn around and go their way in a few more seconds and they’ll lose opportunity. In fact most of the people reading this right now will try it for a few minutes (hopefully on a trading simulator) and decide it can’t be done.

Like I said, my techniques and day trading tips fly in the face of the untrained “gut feeling.” And that’s precisely why they work. Exiting my way is not the whole picture when it comes to the method I use for day trading support and resistance.

Any complex process has to be broken down into small chunks at first, a person has to learn one thing at a time, especially when you want to learn day trading.

First I teach my traders a way to demand that the trade goes profitable immediately. When it doesn’t, I teach them to get out immediately.

Radical, but it works.

My day trading advice for them is don’t wait for the market to prove you wrong, instead, if the market doesn’t immediately prove you right, run for the exits.

Example: Let’s say you enter a day trade. In the first 5 seconds it goes 3 or 4 ticks against you.

What is your course of action?

a. Give it a chance, don’t waste the commission.

b. Sit and hope that it turns around before it hits your stop.

c. “Knowing” your entry was excellent, sit tight and / or move your hard stop away.

d. Add to the position (scale in) to bring your break-even point closer.

e. Get out of the position NOW!!! Don’t think about it, just get out.

Believe it or not, “e” is the right answer in my book. You have to be flexible with everything, but this is the foundation of my trading style. This is the default procedure.

Does it work?… YES it works! This is how I’ve been day trading for the past 27 + years. But it only works IF you know where and when to enter.

Let me show you how it’s done! Subscribe to my RBI Updates in “Real Time”… and see how my support and resistance levels and market analysis will help your trading…No matter what method you’re using. Want more day trading tips that work? Put my experience to work for you! SIGN UP NOW AND GET STARTED!

There’s never been a better opportunity to turn the corner and become a consistent trader.

Mike Reed is author of TradeStalker’s Support and Resistance Updates. Mike began trading the Market in 1982. When he got his start as a trader, Mike was plotting prices on paper tape as the internet had not yet been “born” as we know it today. Years of experience have really given him a feel for Market action. His support and resistance numbers have been published on the internet since 1996. He has a wide readership that includes day traders, floor traders, locals and hedge fund managers. His nightly trading plan, along with his support and resistance zones, are specific and accurate. He offers an unlimited free trial of his nightly TradeStalker Updates.- Copyright 2010 Mike Reed and http://www.TradeStalker.com

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