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Trader Mindset

Michael Martin is a trader and instructor. His show deals with the emotional and psychological aspects of trading and managing risk. His book "The Inner Voice of Trading" and features interviews with Michael Marcus, Bill Dunn, and Ed Seykota - who also wrote the Foreword. Get the audio book free at MartinKronicle.com.
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Now displaying: Page 1
May 7, 2018

There were times when I invited huge vol to my portfolio. It would run up 20% and then dive-bomb to -20%...that's intraweek!

The portfolio comprised of outright directional trades including long/short futures, debit option trades, and long stocks. 

What I found over time though, was that all this ebb and flow created an equity curve that looked like a heart monitor.

I had to find a way to create positive slope to the curve. That's how we keep score. 

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Moreover, it wasn't about the instruments that I was trading nor the combination of them, but HOW I was trading them.  

Once I determined that my up days and weeks were from a small semblance of skill and not luck, I had to learn to keep the profits that the market was "giving" me. 

Backtesting, I found the optimal points where I had to cut my losses and, more difficult than that, where to take profits without unwinding profitable trades too soon - to me, the hardest trade there is to make. 

In this episode, I remember how I had to make tough decisions around blue-chip names when you're taught that selling them is a sacrilege. (Watch the attached video to see what I mean.)

Our first order of business once we add risk, is to keep losses small. Once I did that in concert with learning tactical ways to take profits, my equity curve took off.

And that's not having to change my orientation to trading, the instruments I traded, nor the timeframes within which I traded.

Those two seemingly small adjustments led to huge gains and I didn't have to do that much to turn this situation around. 

 

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