Posts Tagged Swing Trading

9 Deadly Trading Mistakes!

The following are a list of nine things you want to avoid at all costs. Anyone of them can literally destroy your financial dreams and goals!

1. Trading with money you can?t afford to lose.

One of the greatest obstacles to successful trading is using money that you really can?t afford to lose. Examples of this would be money that is supposed to be used to pay the mortgage, bills or your child?s college tuition. This is sometimes referred to as ?trading with scared money? and there is a very good reason for that. Ultimately what happens is that when someone knows in the back of their mind that they are risking the rent money, they trade out of fear and emotion versus logic and no emotion.

If you are in this situation I highly recommend that you stop trading until you earn enough to put into an account that you truly can afford to lose without causing major financial setbacks. You can start with as little as $2000 and trade stocks under $30.

2. The need to be ?certain?.

We all have the need to make sure that the trade we want to make is going to be a good one. Therefore we look for signs that will give us a confirmation to enter. This can come in several forms, for example? Tuning into CNBC or the Wall Street Journal to give us news that our stock is on the move or waiting for a couple of extra days to make sure that the stock is really flying and just not on a false breakout. Other traders will get opinions from friends, family or broker. Others will wait for ten technical indicators to line up and give the ?green light?.

All of these are okay to a point, however the big mistake to avoid is taking so much time that you let the trade take off without you. Interestingly, what ends up happening as a result of waiting too long is that you actually increase your risk. This is because as a stock moves higher and higher there are fewer buyers left in the market and it can come tumbling down until more buyers step in. It is like a game of musical chairs; eventually someone gets caught without a chair.

Traders who wait and wait and wait to make extra sure are usually the ones buying the top tick just before the stocks sells off. They then beat themselves up thinking they picked the wrong stock. Odds are it had nothing to do with their selection, just bad timing.

The thing to keep in mind is that there can be no absolute certainty in any given trade. All we ever can do is take a very educated risk along with a leap of faith!

3. Spending profits before you make them.

Nothing is more exciting then getting into a trade that blasts off and puts you into a highly profitable situation. This can cause major problems however, because this type of trade puts you in a highly euphoric state and leads to daydreaming about the huge profits still to come. You say ?Wow I?m already up 15% in two days; I?ll be up 50% in a week and probably double my money in no time!? Then the next thing that happens is you are deciding on the great new car you are going to buy or perhaps telling your boss that he can stick it? Well you get the idea!

The real problem occurs as you get caught up in the daydream and expectations. This causes you to not be prepared to get out as the market sells off and eats up your profits because you have convinced yourself of the eventual outcome and will deny the reality of the situation.

The simple remedy for this is to know where and how you will take profits once you enter the trade. Also, realize that the market will only go up as long as it wants and not how high you think it should go.

4. Forming an opinion.

I?m here to tell you that the market does not give a damn about you or your opinions. Even if they are based on painstaking research or from a ?Wall Street Guru?, it doesn?t matter!

Maybe your opinion on market direction for the long term is correct, but it doesn?t mean that in the short term things can?t move against you. Remember that there are tens of thousands of traders out there who also have an opinion. It is all these different opinions that can cause great fluctuations in price on any given day or week regardless of your outlook

5. Three 4-letter words that will kill you! HOPE—WISH—PRAY

If you ever find yourself doing one or more of the above while in a trade then you are in big trouble! As I have already said, the market doesn?t give a damn. All the hoping, wishing and praying in the world is not going to turn a losing trade into a winning one.

When you are wrong just use a simple 4-letter word to correct the situation-SELL!

6. Not sticking to your plan

A big source of trouble arises when a trader starts to deviate from their strategy. Maybe for a week they will trade according to one set of rules and the next use something entirely different.

This flying by the seat of the pants always ends up backfiring. This is because the trader can never be certain what is working and what is not.

You must never deviate from your methodology once you start. As long as it is a good one statistically there is absolutely no reason to change it. The way to make money from it is to trade it over and over again to exploit the edge it gives you.

One thing to also be aware of is that a trader is most vulnerable to switching approaches after a few loses. So, pay special attention at these times.

7. Not knowing how to get out of a losing trade.

It?s amazing how many people I have talked to who don?t have any clear escape plan for getting out of a bad trade. Once again they hope, pray wish and rationalize their position. As I keep saying the market does not care what you think. It does what it does and when you are wrong you are wrong!

The easiest way to keep a bad trade from going really bad is to determine before you get in, where you will get out. You can use a dollar amount or at some target point such as the low of the previous 15-minute bar.

***Make sure you don?t get the ?stunned deer in the headlights syndrome?. This is where you see the stock fall to your stop loss point, but you are unable to take action. Maybe this is due to fear or disbelief that you are wrong, but unless you get out ASAP you could end up I major financial trouble!

8. Having an ego.

I have seen a number of individuals enter the trading game that were extremely successful in other business ventures. Because of this they had a fairly big ego and thought they couldn?t fail. Their egos became their downfall because they couldn?t except that they were wrong and refused to bail out of bad trades.

Once again, whoever or wherever you came from does not concern the markets. All the charm, powers of persuasion, number of diplomas on the wall or business savvy will not budge the market when you are wrong.

9. Falling in love with a stock or trade.

Let me give you an example of what I mean. Back in the spring of 1999 EFAX was a really hot stock. I waited to buy it on a dip and did so at $19/share. It started to move up strongly and life was great!

After a while though, it started to come back to my entry point and then below it. Here?s the problem. For some reason I really liked EFAX and sort of became attached to it. Ultimately I couldn?t let go of it even though I knew I should. I justified and rationalized why my dear friend should bounce back, but it never did. I finally had to break off my love affair when the stock hit $9. (Ouch!)

The moral of this story is never fall in love, let alone get married to any stock. It can cost you dearly!

I can\’t emphasize enough the importance of the principles in this article. Whether you are a position trader, swing trader or day trader, these principles can help you avoid some costly and painful financial mistakes. As they say, smart people learn from their mistakes and brilliant people learn from the mistakes of others.

This article is courtesy of Dr. Jeffrey Wilde, a trading veteran with 15 years of experience in all major markets. He is a trading coach to over 1400 traders in 38 countries.
For additional info: http://www.win-at-trading.com

Writen By : Jeff Wilde

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Size Counts!

What the heck am I talking about?

It is often said that to grow mentally, spiritually, emotionally and personally that you have to stretch and move out of your comfort zone. I definitely believe in this concept, however… When it comes to day trading, swing trading or position trading stocks, futures, options or forex, going outside your comfort zone can be dangerous!

Let me explain… Say, a trader is used to buying 100 shares of a stock at a time with the average value of $50/share. He/she is very comfortable with putting this amount at risk. They never experience any anxiety and can sleep well at night at this level. However, watch what happens when these traders decide to up their ante to 200 – 300 shares.

All of a sudden they are worried about every tick against them and start riding an emotional roller coaster based on the current price of the stock. At these levels they become much more emotional and their judgment becomes cloudy at times. Now they start making bad decisions that never occurred at the 100 share level.

A good idea is for you to take a good hard think about \”what size trader\” you are and where you are completely comfortable at. Write these numbers down and force yourself to never deviate from them. When the time does come to raise your bet size up, do it in increments over time. For example: If you want to go from 100 -200 shares, do 120 on week number 1, 140 on week number 2 etc.

I assure you, that by sticking to the concepts in this article that you will make trading a much more comfortable and profitable experience. Be patient and stay focused and the money may roll in at levels you never thought possible!

This article by Dr. Jeffrey Wilde, a trading veteran with 15 years of experience in all major markets. He is a trading coach to over 1400 traders in 38 countries.

For additional info: http://www.win-at-trading.com

Writen By : Jeff Wilde

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Introduction To Swing Trading

Trading Categories

In our opinion, there are three broad categories that can be used to classify all trading methods. These categories are based around the amount of time a speculator holds his or her position in the market. These classifications are described below:

Short-term – Traders hold positions from a matter of seconds to several hours but rarely longer than 1 day. Examples: Day Traders: Scalping, momentum breakouts.

Medium-term – Once a position is held for longer than one day it can be classified as a medium term or swing trade. Traders hold positions from several days to weeks. Examples: Technical and fundamental swing traders.

Long-term – Traders hold on to positions for weeks, months and even years. Examples: Position trading, investing.

There is no rule to say that you must constrict yourself to only one classification. It will probably be the case that you will try your hand at all three before you find what suits you the best. You may find that you can only create an acceptable level of diversification by using methods from all three at once! Likewise there is no rule that says technical traders must be short or medium term traders, or fundamentals have no place in a day trader?s tool box.

What is Swing Trading?

Swing trading is essentially a medium term trading strategy. Trades will last from a few days to several weeks. These trades are most commonly based on technical analysis carried out on daily timeframe charts but swing traders can switch to shorter-term charts to pinpoint entries. The object is to trade in and out of the market to take advantage of the medium term price swings that occur in any long-term trend.

What is a Swing?

By definition a swing is a short-term price fluctuation. These fluctuations form a swing high and a swing low and tend to look like mini trends within a longer-term trend. Price swings occur on all time frames. If you think about it, price never goes straight up, or down, without some fluctuations.

The Objective of a Swing Trader

The goal of a swing trader is to capture a portion of the price swings that occur in a long-term trend. They believe that this gives them the advantage over position traders. This is because a share may gain $10 in value over the course of a year but the swings in price may be amount to $20 or $30.
There is a mistaken belief that swing traders can only make money in a sideways moving market, therefore missing out on strong trends. This is not the case as a good swing trading method will identify the beginning of a new swing, and if this swing develops into a longer term trend there is no reason for the trader to exit his or her position. These substantial swing trades are rare but swing traders make sure they capture them if the market makes them available.

Advantages of Swing Trading

It is possible to identify, and trade, price swing on all time frames. However, the most common understanding of a swing trader is one who uses daily charts to identify trade opportunities. Because of this many swing traders pay little or no attention to daily price action. Analysis can be conducted at the market close every day and it is possible to place your orders in the form of stop and limit entries before market open the next day. This is exceptionally advantageous for those who are ruled out of day trading due to a full-time job or for those who simply choose not to spend their day in front of a PC.
Although less active than a day trading in terms of frequency of trades swing trading is vastly more active than full-blown investing. An investor may make a handful of trades a year at most whereas a swing trader may identify several trade opportunities a month depending on how many stocks, indices or currencies he or she chooses to follow.
Developing a swing trading strategy and identifying trade possibilities gives you the opportunity to take responsibility for your own portfolio rather than leaving it to a financial advisor or broker. This is ideal if you don?t have the time or inclination to day trade but you want to avoid handing the responsibility over your risk capital to someone else.

Swing Trading Restrictions

There is no limit to the number of swing trades you can make as long as you have a positive profitability ratio and enough margin available in your account to cover your open positions. However, the fact that swing traders are allowed to participate in intermediate price swings is because the size of their orders does not have a significant influence on the market price of the security. This rules out large institutions, hedge funds and mutual funds from effectively swing trading individual stocks because their order size may move the market.

Summary

Swing trading may not be for everyone. Many traders take time to adapt to certain methods and try several before deciding on something that suits them, and their account. Swing trading is immensely popular with those speculators who find the white knuckle ride of day trading too intense but enjoy managing their positions on an end of day basis. Although most swing methods tend to be heavily technical analysis based it still pays to make oneself aware of important data releases such as earnings reports. These reports have the potential to create gaps in the chart that may be larger than your risk tolerance.
Although you may be mesmerised by the swings in our examples you must be aware that it is very rare for any swing method to capture a swing right at the optimum entry point. Swing traders aim to collect a portion of the swing by identifying criteria that put the odds of success in their favour. Trading with stops and defining risk is vital.

Pictures: http://www.passion-trading.com/Tutorials.IntroductionToSwingTrading.htm

David Thorpe is a senior contributor for http://www.passion-trading.com a free educational resource centre for traders and investors. The goal of the site is to stimulate the minds of its users, enabling them to achieve a greater understanding the art of trading, thus helping them to become more profitable.

Writen By : David Thorpe

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