Monday, July 04, 2011

AN UNFORESEEN MONDAY..?


                      FROM AN EXPERIENCE

My pride did not let me act. The prestige of my theory was at stake.
I just kept saying this stock cannot go down any further. I did not 
know what I learned later, that there is no such thing as cannot 
in the market. Any stock can do anything. -- Nicolas Darvas

1. FIRST THINGS FIRST
First, be sure that you really want to trade. As both Krausz and 
Faulkner confirmed,based on their experience in working with
traders, it is common for people who think they want to trade to 
discover that they really don’t.

2. EXAMINE YOUR MOTIVES
Think about why you really want to trade. If you want to trade for 
the excitement, you might be better off riding a roller coaster or 
taking up hang gliding. In my own case, I found that the underlying 
motive for trading was serenity or peace of mind-hardly the 
emotional state typi-cal of trading. Another personal motive for 
trading was that I loved puzzle solving-and the markets provided 
the ultimate puzzle. How-ever, while I enjoyed the cerebral aspects 
of market analysis, I didn’t particularly like the visceral 
characteristics of trading itself. The con-trast between my motives 
and the activity resulted in very obvious con-flicts. You need to 
examine your own motives very carefully for any such conflicts. 
The market is a stem master. You need to do almost everything right 
to win. If parts of you are pulling in opposite direc-tions, the game 
is lost before you start.

How did I resolve my own conflict? I decided to focus completely 
on mechanical trading approaches in order to eliminate the 
emotionalism in trading. Equally important, focusing on the design 
of mechanical systems directed my energies to the part of trading 
I did enjoy-the puzzle-solving aspects. Although I had devoted some 
energy to mechanical systems for these reasons for a number of 
years, I eventu-ally came to the realization that I wanted to move in 
this direction exclusively. (This is not intended as an advocacy for 
mechanical sys-tems over human-decision-oriented approaches. 
I am only providing a personal example. The appropriate answer 
for another trader could well be very different.)

3. MATCH THE TRADING METHOD TO YOUR 
PERSONALITY
It is critical to choose a method that is consistent with your own 
person-ality and comfort level. If you can’t stand to give back 
significant prof-its, then a long-term trend-following approach-even 
a very good one-will be a disaster, because you will never be able to 
follow it. If you don’t want to watch the quote screen all day 
(or can’t), don’t try a day-trading method. If you can’t stand the 
emotional strain of making trading decisions, then try to develop a 
mechanical system for trading the markets. The approach you use 
must be right for you; it must feel comfortable. The importance of 
this cannot be overemphasized. Remember Randy McKay’s 
assertion:

“Virtually every successful trader I know ultimately ended up with a 
trading style suited to his per-sonality.” Incidentally, the mismatch 
of trading style and personality is one of the key reasons why 
purchased trading systems rarely make profits for those who buy 
them, even if the system is a good one. While the odds of getting a 
winning system are small-certainly less than 50/50-the odds of 
getting a system that fits your personality are smaller still. 
I’U leave it to your imagination to decide on the odds of buying a 
prof-itable/moderate risk system and using it effectively.

4. IT IS ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY TO HAVE AN EDGE
You can’t win without an edge, even with the world’s greatest 
discipline and money management skills. If you could, then it would 
be possible to win at roulette (over the long run) using perfect 
discipline and risk con-trol. Of course, that is an impossible task 
because of the laws of probabil-ity. If you don’t have an edge, 
all that money management and discipline will do for you is to 
guarantee that you will gradually bleed to death. Inci-dentally, 
if you don’t know what your edge is, you don’t have one.

5. DERIVE A METHOD
To have an edge, you must have a method. The type of method is 
irrele-vant. Some of the supertraders are pure fundamentalists; 
some are pure technicians; and some are hybrids. Even within 
each group, there are tremendous variations. For example, within 
the group of technicians, there are tape readers (or their modem-day 
equivalent-screen watch-ers), chartists, mechanical system traders, 
Elliott Wave analysts, Gann analysts, and so on. The type of method 
is not important, but having one is critical-and, of course, 
the method must have an edge.

6. DEVELOPING A METHOD IS HARD WORK
Shortcuts rarely lead to trading success. Developing your own 
approach requires research, observation, and thought. 
Expect the process to take lots of time and hard work. 
Expect many dead ends and multiple fail-ures before you find a 
successful trading approach that is right for you. Remember that 
you are playing against tens of thousands of profession-als. 
Why should you be any better? If it were that easy, there would 
be a lot more millionaire traders.

7. SKILL VERSUS HARD WORK
Is trading success dependent on innate skills? Or is hard work 
suffi-cient? There is no question in my mmd that many of the 
supertraders have a special talent for trading. Marathon running 
provides an appro-priate analogy. Virtually anyone can run a 
marathon, given sufficient commitment and hard work. 
Yet, regardless of the effort and desire, only a small fraction of the 
population will ever be able to run a 2:12 marathon. Similarly, 
anyone can learn to play a musical instrument. But again, 
regardless of work and dedication, only a handful of individuals 
possess the natural talent to become concert soloists. The general 
rule is that exceptional performance requires both natural talent 
and hard work to realize its potential. If the innate skill is lacking, 
hard work may pro-vide proficiency, but not excellence.
In my opinion, the same principles apply to trading. Virtually 
any-one can become a net profitable trader, but only a few have 
the inborn talent to become supertraders. For this reason, it may 
be possible to teach trading success, but only up to a point. 
Be realistic in your goals.

8. GOOD TRADING SHOULD BE EFFORTLESS
Wait a minute. Didn’t I just list hard work as an ingredient to 
successful trading? How can good trading require hard work and 
yet be effortless?
There is no contradiction. Hard work refers to the preparatory 
pro-cess-the research and observation necessary to become a good 
trader-not to the trading itself. In this respect, hard work is 
associated with such qualities as vision, creativity, persistence, 
drive, desire, and commitment. Hard work certainly does not mean 
that the process of trading itself should be filled with exertion. 
It certainly does not imply struggling with or fighting against the 
markets. On the contrary, the more effortless and natural the trading 
process, the better the chances for success. As the anonymous 
trader in Zen and the Art of Trading put it, “In trading, just as in 
archery, whenever there is effort, force, strain-ing, struggling, 
or trying, it’s wrong. You’re out of sync; you’re out of harmony 
with the market. The perfect trade is one that requires no effort.”

Visualize a world-class distance runner, clicking off mile after mile 
at a five-minute pace. Now picture an out-of-shape, 250-pound 
couch potato trying to run a mile at a ten-minute pace. 
The professional run-ner glides along gracefully-almost 
effortlessly-despite the long dis-tance and fast pace. 
The out-of-shape runner, however, is likely to struggle, huffing 
and puffing like a Yugo going up a 1 percent grade. 
Who is putting in more work and effort? Who is more successful? 
Of course, the world-class runner puts in his hard work during 
training, and this prior effort and commitment are essential to his 
success.

9. MONEY MANAGEMENT AND RISK CONTROL
Almost every person I interviewed felt that money management 
was even more important than the trading method. Many potentially 
suc-cessful systems or trading approaches have led to disaster 
because the trader applying the strategy lacked a method of 
controlling risk. You don’t have to be a mathematician or 
understand portfolio theory to manage risk.

Risk control can be as easy as the following three-step approach:

1. Never risk more than 1 to 2 percent of your capital on any trade. 
(Depending on your approach, a modestly higher number might still 
be reasonable. However, I would strongly advise against anything 
over 5 percent.)

2. Predetermine your exit point before you get into a trade. 
Many of the traders I interviewed cited exactly this rule.

3. If you lose a certain predetermined amount of your starting 
capital (e.g., 10 percent to 20 percent), take a breather, analyze 
what went wrong, and wait until you feel confident and have a 
high-probability idea before you begin trading again. For traders 
with large accounts, trading very small is a reasonable alternative 
to a complete trading hia-tus. The strategy of cutting trading size 
down sharply during losing streaks is one mentioned by many of 
the traders interviewed.
                                                                                     (to be contd)



TODAY’S TRADING STRATEGY
OF NIFTY FUTURES – JULY 4th

TURNING POINT IS POSSIBLE @ 5784
Strong resistance (overall) @ 5689-5739 (for the whole month)
and after that @ 5767-84 and @ 5817-38

What shall we expect today ?
Generally below 5642 will favour bears

Above 5627 for 15 minutes means
hike upto 5648-58-68
Good resistance between 5668-78 today

Suppose
If cuts 5620 and trades below for 10 minutes,
sure slide upto 5584 and after that 5561 is possible
Strong Intraday Support @ 5584 & 5561


FREE TIPS OF INDIVIDUAL SHARES ARE STOPPED 
TODAY– SUBSCRIBE US TO EARN MORE



FASCINATING JULY 2011

This year, July has 5 Fridays, 5 Saturdays and 5 Sundays.











EXTRA TIP
The month is referred to as ‘money bags’ in Chinese culture  

and is considered a lucky month from a financial standpoint. 




TRADING IS SIMPLE - NOT JUST EASY

I believe that good 
traders are able to 
trade the markets 
effortlessly – 
it’s simple to them. 
But getting to the 
point of doing 
anything 
effortlessly is not 
easy.In fact,
 it’s really hard. 
A good analogy 
would be describing 
an athletes ability to perform his or her skill. 
If we took two people – one being a person who runs two miles 
everyday versus a person who hasn’t ran for the past two months, 
who will have the easier time running one mile? 
The answer is simple of course. The person who runs everyday will 
be able to run one mile easily – it will be effortless to them. 
However, the person who hasn’t ran in two months will find it 
extremely hard to and likely have to take breaks in-between so 
that he or she can finish.

In order for trading to become simple, there are some crucial and 
necessary steps that need to be taken. There needs to be consistency 
in the traders approach to the markets. It’s unfortunate, but we are 
in a day and age where traders are obsessed with just “trading for 
the fun of it”, and they aren’t realizing that that’s what’s preventing 
them from being consistent and successful. Again, if we go back to 
our analogy, does a great athlete deter from their routine? 
No. In fact, they have routines that boil down to eating, and sleeping 
habits in order to keep themselves moving in the right direction. 
It’s really not a mystery, but for whatever reason most traders seem
to fail that this approach is what’s needed if you want to be good.

There really is a direct correlation between traders who are good 
and traders who are not. There is a direct correlation between traders
 who are consistent and traders who ride the roller coaster. 
That difference is preparation. Preparation and repetition is what 
makes anyone great at what they do. But preparing is not easy. 
It takes focus, will, and a lot of discipline. In trading that translates 
to having a very specific trading plan, with specific rules and the 
discipline to do it every single day. And as you prepare yourself 
everyday in your approach to the markets, you’ll find that trading 
becomes simple. It becomes effortless.

So if you want to be a good trader, scratch that – if you want to 
become a great trader, step back and think about what it really takes,
and prepare yourself. It won’t be easy, but sooner or later you’ll 
realize how simple it really is.

10 GOLDEN RULES - SLIDE SHOW



                             WHO IS A TEACHER ??
Who is a teacher?? This is a very good one !very moving ! 
From A School Principal's speech at a graduation.. He said Doctor 
wants his child to become a doctor......... Engineer wants his child to 
become engineer...... Businessman wants his ward to become 
CEO..... BUT a teacher also wants his child to become one of them..!
 Nobody wants to become a teacher BY CHOICE ....
Very sad but that's the truth.....!!! The dinner guests were sitting 
around the table discussing life.One man, a CEO, decided to explain 
the problem with education. He argued, What's a kid going to learn 
from someone who decided his best option in life was to become a 
teacher? To stress his point he said to another guest; You're a 
teacher, Bonnie. Be honest. What do you make? Teacher Bonnie, 
who had a reputation for honesty and frankness replied, You want 
to know what I make?(She paused for a second, then began...) 
Well, I make kids work harder than they ever thought they could.
I make a C+ feel like the Congressional Medal of Honor winner.
make kids sit through 40 minutes of class time when their parents 
can't make them sit for 5 min. without an I Pod, Game Cube or 
movie rental.You want to know what I make? 
(She paused again and looked at each and every person at the table)
I make kids wonder.I make them question.I make them apologize 
and mean it.I make them have respect and take responsibility for 
their actions.I teach them how to write and then I make them write. 
Keyboarding isn't everything.I make them read, read, read.
I make them show all their work in math. They use their God given 
brain, not the man-made calculator.I make my students from other 
countries learn everything they need to know about English while 
preserving their unique cultural identity.I make my classroom a 
place where all my students feel safe.Finally, I make them 
understand that if they use the gifts they were given, work hard, 
and follow their hearts, they can succeed in life
(Bonnie paused one last time and then continued.)
Then, when people try to judge me by what I make, with me 
knowing money isn't everything, I can hold my head up high and 
pay no attention because they are ignorant. You want to know 
what I make?
I MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN ALL YOUR LIVES,
EDUCATING KIDS AND PREPARING THEM TO BECOME 
CEO's , DOCTORS AND ENGINEERS......
What do you make Mr. CEO?
His jaw dropped; he went silent.




MESSAGE TODAY

The concessions of the weak are the concessions of fear.
            -EDMUND BURKE, speech on conciliation with America




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