Capinco

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Words To Remember.





Stock Trading Systems

 
● The Holy Grail Stock Trading System
It’s a tendency of many new chartists to feverishly search for the Holy Grail stock trading
system. They think if they just look hard enough and study enough charts, they’ll discover
that perfect pattern or oscillator.
The perfect stock trading system does not exist, but profitable ones certainly do...
What you want to do is give yourself a slight edge. If you discover a combination
of techniques that are right only 50% of the time, you can make money provided
your winning trades are larger than your losing trades. You can even be right less
than 50% of the time and still make money, as long as your winners are sufficiently
larger than your losers.  So long as you have a positive expectancy, you’ll make money,
even if you have lots of losing trades.

● Expert Recommendations
Once you become even slightly familiar with technical analysis, you’ll realize that
many stock brokers and analysts recommend stocks that look absolutely horrible
from a technical analysis perspective. They violate basic TA principles like buying in the
middle of a downtrend.  Unfortunately, some people take on “expert” recommendations
as their stock trading system.
Maybe these analysts and brokers will be proven right. Maybe whatever they’re touting
will stage an amazing reversal or break through resistance. On the other hand, maybe
it won’t. Why not wait until the charts look good, and then buy?

● Don’t Try to Catch Falling Knives
Many people love to trying to pick bottoms. Their stock trading system is to buy
stocks thinking they “can’t possibly go any lower,” only to get killed when they fall
even lower. If you follow technical analysis, bottom picking starts to look less and less
attractive. Most times bottom picking involves buying stocks in horrible down trends. The
fact is, yes, you will lose some profit by waiting the trend to reverse, but you will also
spare yourself much pain by avoiding jumping in front of a speeding train. For those
just learning technical analysis, it’s probably best to avoid bottom picking all together.

● Money Management
Even the best stock trading system is completely useless unless it’s used on
conjunction with proper money management—that is, at what point you cut your
losses and how much of your total account you put into each trade. Here are some
practical notes on properly putting together your own stock trading system.

● Always Cut Your Losses Early
Your stock trading system can be right 90% of the time, but if the 10% you’re wrong
destroys your account, you’ll never make money. That’s why when it comes to learning
how to trade stocks, you cut your losses and admit when you’re wrong. You should
exit a trade when the reason you entered it, from a charting perspective, is
negated. For example, if you buy XYZ because it’s bouncing off its well-established
trend line, then XYZ suddenly falls below its trend line, it’s time to cut your losses
and sell.  Of course, admitting you’re wrong is easier said than done, which is one of
the reasons why the psychology of trading has been studied quite a bit.  A great
book on the subject is XXXX.
  
● The 2% Rule
How much of your account should you allocate to each trade, and when should you
cut your losses? As a general rule, never risk more than 2% of your total account on
each trade. This way you can be wrong 50 times in a row before you lose all your
money. That does NOT mean you set a 2% stop-loss (a predefined exit point) on each
trade.
It does mean the following:
  • Let’s say you have a $10,000 account; 2% x $10,000 = $200. That means you can risk $200 per trade.
  • In a $10,000 account, you can make a $4,000 trade IF you maintain a 5% stop loss
    ($4,000 x 5% = $200).
Although 2% is considered an acceptable risk, many traders still consider it too chancy. If you want to risk 1% or even 0.5% per trade, then by all means, do so. Risking as low as 0.5% of your account per trade is quite prudent. On a $10,000 dollar account, that translates into $1,000 per position with a 5% stop loss.
First, determine what % you want to risk per trade, then adjust your position sizing accordingly. Remember, if you follow the above advice, you cannot go too wrong when putting together your own stock trading system.

Patrick Abboud
info@capinco.com
facebook.com/capincos
 
 

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