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Topic: Everything you need to know about trading – the rest is up to you (blogpost) - page 2. (Read 245 times)

hero member
Activity: 2982
Merit: 790

Risk and Money Management

Psychology

Trading Strategy


Cant deny with these very basic factors which would needed for you to mind of when you do make trades but actually these things could be attained when you are doing trading in the process
or simply talks about gaining it through experience and just to add up too:

•Emotion Handling (Dont get fomoed easily and affecting with fuds or some sort)
-This might be include in psychology factor too but this one should really be mainly be concerned on.

•Persistence and Consistency

•Sufficient time to put on.

Very basic things but actually hard to apply when you are already on the actual field.
full member
Activity: 252
Merit: 113
NFTs on Sale: https://bit.ly/2POlV17
Trading is like a game.
If you manage to exploit your opponents mistakes (opponents=other market participants) you can win.

Well that's the nature of trading: one wins, one loses.  And yes, if you find the spots where for a lot of market participants psychology sets in, you'll on a good track to a great trade.
sr. member
Activity: 2366
Merit: 332
Trading is like a game.
If you manage to exploit your opponents mistakes (opponents=other market participants) you can win.

Yes it is a winning while there is a losing from the other end. Is like trade by barter thing but this time it is money being involved. You either lose for another to win or the other way but we all prefer to win to get our portfolio rising. How we can win is to have a working strategy, minimize our risk and and  apply technical and fundamental analysis.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
Trading is like a game.
If you manage to exploit your opponents mistakes (opponents=other market participants) you can win.
hero member
Activity: 3038
Merit: 628
Vave.com - Crypto Casino
you dont need strategy, you just wait tweets from elon

Elon Musk already make his deal and now probably will forget for some time about crypto..

If you talk about day trading or short term trading then defiantly it will end up in loss in the long run.
That guy is just telling what he thinks but I also feel the humor of what he said. It is true that many day traders are losing instead of making their days but not all of them are losing in the long run. If all of them are then there shall be no one that's staying as a day trader.

But if you are long term hodler and have the patience to watch the market bleeding without selling your coins then you are destined to win.
And if your coins are the good ones and you can also buy if the market bleeds.
sr. member
Activity: 1554
Merit: 260
you dont need strategy, you just wait tweets from elon

Elon Musk already make his deal and now probably will forget for some time about crypto..

If you talk about day trading or short term trading then defiantly it will end up in loss in the long run. But if you are long term hodler and have the patience to watch the market bleeding without selling your coins then you are destined to win.
copper member
Activity: 246
Merit: 7
buy bitcoin, hodl bitcoin
you dont need strategy, you just wait tweets from elon
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
The Three Major Pillars
Everything you need to know about trading – the rest is up to you


Reading time: 5min



95% of all traders lose money long-term. Conversely that means only every twentieth person trades profitably. Why is that? Do most people simply have bad luck, are not intelligent enough or get advice from the wrong people? Hardly likely.

Essentially, all problems in trading emerge from three fundamental aspects: The risk and money management, the influence of our psychology and the actual trading strategy. Those are called the three pillars of trading, which are the bases for all challenges, decisions and most of all returns. Hereinafter we will take a rough look at each aspect.

Risk and Money Management

When most so-called experts talk about successful trading, everyone has a different opinion. Countercyclical entries, exorbitant limits, writings of a stock market guru, the number of hits for a certain Google search. All of that is not really important – the majority of our attention should go towards the protection of our capital. Of the three pillars, solid money management is the easiest to implement but also the most neglected one. That is true not only for beginners, but also more advanced traders. The problem does not lie in defining the risk parameters, rather the uncompromising implementation is often being neglected.

As a rule of thumb: Do not risk more than three percent of your total capital on any single trade! However, that does not mean that you can only use up to three percent of your total capital. An example: If you use 100% of your capital for a trade and set your stop-loss at three percent, you effectively risk three percent of your capital. If you use ten percent of your capital and set a stop-loss at 30%, you effectively risk the same amount, namely three percent. Using the leverage and your limits, you can precisely calculate your risk profile. More on that in another article.

Psychology

Trading decisions are mostly being influenced by two emotions: The fear of losing money and the greed of not making enough, which makes you risk too much money (FOMO – fear of missing out). In interaction they make you instinctively buy high and sell low, even though rationally it should be the other way around. Why do we make our lives as traders unnecessarily so difficult?

Unfortunately, our brain is not a computer. We succumb cognitive biases that unconsciously try to sabotage us. They trick our mind systematically and are responsible for often not making the best decisions. On an everyday basis we usually don’t recognize them even though they have a huge influence on our being – especially in trading. There are many examples, here are a few major ones:

Bandwagon effect: A decision is being made because other members of the social group (friends, colleagues, market participants) have previously made that decision.

Overconfidence: A tendency to systematically overvalue one’s own competences (dancing, driving, trading).

Confirmation bias: The tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation of one’s existing beliefs or theories.

Loss aversion: Emotionally, loss weighs heavier than the equivalent gain (especially with money).

Even though emotions are an integral part of human motivation, they should not influence our trading decisions. It helps to try to quantify one’s strategy as precisely as possible and then sticking to a predetermined plan. Over time it will become a habit which makes following the plan easier and easier.

Trading Strategy

The third pillar is the most obvious one, making it so dangerous. Most traders almost exclusively focus on their trading strategy, unconsciously neglecting the other two aspects. Nonetheless, having a profitable strategy is imperative – the only question is how.

In short, there is no holy grail. On the one hand there are an infinite number of strategies, on the other hand, everyone has to find something that fits one’s lifestyle (for example a doctor working 80 hours a week should not be a daytrader). A strategy is good if it’s profitable long-term ‐ not more and not less. There are many different approaches, here is a selection:

News trading, basing decisions on the media, news and events.

Price Action trading on the basis of market observations and price movements.

Technical Analysis, the valuation of the asset based on charting patterns and technical indicators.

Daytrading, exploiting small price fluctuations with short holding periods.

Swingtrading, the analysis of medium-term price movements (swings).

No matter which strategy you end up using, the most important characteristic is the reproducibility. Market situations should be judged based on predetermined parameters and not based on feelings. The strategy should equally be applicable to new situations. The fund manager John Marks Templeton expresses this advice in the following way: “The four most expensive words in the English language are 'This time it's different'”. That means: Even if it's tempting to keep telling yourself extraordinary reasons for a certain trading decision – a reproducible strategy does not have any exceptions.

Summary

The three pillars are not uncorrelated or independent aspects, but rather in a dynamic relationship with each other. Even though trading is a complex topic with many different facets, it is recommended to follow this recipe:

Learn to assess the risk and follow your money management without compromises.

Find a trading strategy that fits you and that gives you an edge in the markets.

Make the implementation of your strategy a strict habit.



For a more detailed article on Risk- and Money-Management visit https://cryptonoah.com/blog/articles/no-risk-management-no-fun/
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