10 Traits Shared by Successful Traders
Floyd's own success as a professional futures trader has enabled him to develop professional relationships with other successful traders. Through these relationships, he has been able to identify important key traits that are common among consistently successful traders.
As a commodity trading advisor, Floyd has discovered that there are many misconceptions among the general public regarding the traits and lifestyles of professional traders. Down through the years, and even today the professional trader remains somewhat of an unsolved mystery to the general public. Fueled by the lure of easy money, the public has portrayed futures trading as an easy way to get rich over night.
New traders look for a magic key or what is known as the "Holy Grail." This search for the Holy Grail is a major obstacle facing most new traders, and must be overcome before success can be realized. There is no holy grail in the sense of a trading formula. The key to lasting success in this business actually depends more upon a disciplined common sense approach where the focus is on minimizing risk.
Discipline is the key to maintaining a low risk trading strategy or approach. One of the most common and important traits Floyd has found among virtual all long-term successful futures traders, is that they put a strong emphasis on risk control and money management. Below are the 10-shared traits of successful traders.
1.Contrary to the stories and rumors, those who trade professionally for a living, trade well below their means. This is the same concept as living below your means, a trait shared by the majority of self-made multimillionaires in the U.S. and world as well.
2.While the inexperienced trader dreads taking losses, professional position traders do not mind taking losses at all. Floyd has been taking losses for years; this is precisely how he has stayed in this business for so long. Neophytes will hold onto losing positions because they do not want to take a loss. Their losing positions will grow and quite often wipe them out completely or place them on margin calls only after a few trades.
3.All successful traders are very persistent and determined to be successful. Most professionals spend long hours analyzing the markets and often may appear obsessive towards their work. The truth is they are very passionate towards their work. However, most professionals do take time out on a regular basis for family, hobbies and rest / recreation needed to recharge their batteries.
Successful traders have one very important trait in common during their learning stage; they never give up. To achieve success in this business, one must be willing to get back up when knocked down and try again and again in order to finally achieve success.
The analogy Floyd likes to use is a comparison between the new trader and novelist Skier. To learn how to ski one must first fall down and then get back up. A critical component of learning how to ski has to do with learning how to recover from a fall and get back up properly. All professional skiers go through this process while learning the skill and art of skiing. Successful traders go through the same process in the beginning as well. It is amazing how many new traders expect to start off skiing down the black-diamond mountains without any lessons or any experience. They quickly learn after a painful fall that this is not as easy as it may look. All successful traders had to start somewhere. They did not start out being successful right away. It takes time to develop the skills, accuracy, and discipline all successful traders have in common.
Many successful traders failed (lost all risk capital) several times before eventually becoming successful. One of the mistakes Floyd sees often as an advisor and mentor to new traders, is a lack of adequate risk capital at startup. Roughly 80% of all new startup businesses that fail in the U.S., do so because they are under-capitalized. Many inexperienced traders will come into this business under-capitalized as well. Greater than 80% of them will fail because of this same issue also. To avoid this pitfall, one should wait until they have saved up adequate risk capital to start their trading business.
In addition, do not "feed" your account. This is another mistake he sees regularly. New traders tend to be either fearless, or extremely fearful. The extremely fearful often limit their chances for success by not placing all their risk capital in their account at the startup. They do this because of an overwhelming fear of losing it all. Instead they gradually lose it all by starting off with too little and adding more, little by little, as they continue to lose money and become frustrated.
It takes money to make money and in order to trade properly using proper stop placements requires a certain amount of risk capital. If you are going to give this business a serious try, do it right and start off with a decent size account. If you don't have enough risk capital, save until you do. If you are too afraid of losing your risk capital, then perhaps this business is not for you.
4.Professional traders do not over trade. They do not trade for the sake of trading.
5.Professional traders do not trade on emotion. Professionals are aware of their own weakness concerning fear and greed. We realize this is something we must always be on guard for. Fear and greed is the catalyst that leads to destruction.
Professional traders have leaned about something called a "threshold". Everyone has a threshold for losses & rewards. This is relative to an individual's net-worth and the amount of risk capital they have. Professionals have learned that they are more likely to lose control of fear and greed if the equity in their account fluctuates wildly like a roller coaster.
In order to maintain a "steady-state" (i.e. smooth ups and downs), the professional will trade below the threshold that triggers extreme fear and greed. Included in our trading system we have developed special "equity" graphs that track the price fluctuations on a day-to-day basis. These help traders determine whether or not a particular trade or market is appropriate for their size account and threshold levels.