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- 5 March 2008
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TH, Prawn,
I'm trying to think outside the square here. Not saying it is the be all and end all.
I did a similar thing to Ivant many years ago (but not to the same extent), turned a few hundred dollars into a few thousand in a very short time. The only money I put into the account was the deposit required for one wool contract, $200 if memory serves me (it was 1980). I knew nothing about risk management (or for that matter anything else).
I also have a friend who turned a couple of thousand into ~$750,000 during the late '80's, over 2 years, before he got educated. He has never been able to get close to those type of returns since. In fact he now looks for such perfect trades with nearly zero risk that he rarely pulls the trigger. (lost all consistency)
What people do when they get educated about markets is usually along the lines of all the common themes...
1 let profits run, cut losses
2 risk no more than 2% per trade
3 be consistent, don't miss trades
4 have a plan that has positive expectancy over the longer term
5 trade what you are comfortable with
6 etc,etc
Yet it is the uneducated that seem to have the huge percentage gains in a small amount of time. It usually finishes when the market changes and they blow up. Then they seek education or quit.
Of course some ideas (of new traders) never get off the ground, they just lose and disappear.
If you think and act like most people, then you can expect the same results as most people. My understanding is that most people lose at this game.
brty
TH, why did you pull that post??
I'm trying to think outside the square here. Not saying it is the be all and end all.
I did a similar thing to Ivant many years ago (but not to the same extent), turned a few hundred dollars into a few thousand in a very short time. The only money I put into the account was the deposit required for one wool contract, $200 if memory serves me (it was 1980). I knew nothing about risk management (or for that matter anything else).
I also have a friend who turned a couple of thousand into ~$750,000 during the late '80's, over 2 years, before he got educated. He has never been able to get close to those type of returns since. In fact he now looks for such perfect trades with nearly zero risk that he rarely pulls the trigger. (lost all consistency)
What people do when they get educated about markets is usually along the lines of all the common themes...
1 let profits run, cut losses
2 risk no more than 2% per trade
3 be consistent, don't miss trades
4 have a plan that has positive expectancy over the longer term
5 trade what you are comfortable with
6 etc,etc
Yet it is the uneducated that seem to have the huge percentage gains in a small amount of time. It usually finishes when the market changes and they blow up. Then they seek education or quit.
Of course some ideas (of new traders) never get off the ground, they just lose and disappear.
If you think and act like most people, then you can expect the same results as most people. My understanding is that most people lose at this game.
brty
TH, why did you pull that post??