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Re: [RT] Confidence is (nearly) all



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Ric,
 
You must be fairly confident that your ass isn't 
going to be booted off the list for commercial spamming.
 
Take care,
 
Steve
<BLOCKQUOTE 
style="BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; PADDING-RIGHT: 0px">
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  <DIV 
  style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black">From: 
  ric 
  ingram 
  To: <A 
  href="mailto:realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"; 
  title=realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2002 8:20 
  AM
  Subject: [RT] Confidence is (nearly) 
  all
  Hi,As traders we talk about ourselves as 
  trading:        -       grains,        -       currencies,        -       stocks 
  and 
  shares,        -       equity 
  indices,        -       ...We 
  also say we 
  trade:        -       futures,        -       options,        -       forwards,        -       ...We 
  often describe ourselves as 
  being:        -       buyers 
  and 
  holders,        -       long 
  term 
  traders,        -       medium 
  term 
  traders,        -       day 
  traders,        -       ...We 
  can consider 
  ourselves;        -       trend-followers,        -       spreaders,        -       volatility 
  breakout 
  players,        -       bulls 
  or 
  bears,        -       scalpers,        -       faders,        -       cycle 
  traders,        -       Gann 
  traders,        -       ...All 
  these can be true descriptions.Of course some traders are composites, 
  trading many instruments, instrument types, trading durations and styles. 
  But every trader, whether aware of it are not, trades their confidence 
  level.Based on assisting many types of traders each at different 
  levels of success, trading success can be seen as mostly a mirror of 
  confidence levels.So how is a high confidence level achieved and how 
  can confidence be measured?    And how can trader 
  confidence be built and developed and honed over 
  time?------------It will help in the later discussion of 
  confidence building if we look first at some common problems of trader 
  confidence:                -       shallow 
  confidence (compared to deep-rooted 
  confidence),        -       over-confidence.Shallow 
  confidence is short-lived, easily shattered and thus of limited value to a 
  trader.An analogy might be of a teenager trader who is brimming with 
  shallow confidence.   He/she has not experienced a major and rapid 
  market move and is innocent or naive about margin changes and computer 
  problems and difficulties getting through to his/her broker and increased 
  bid-offer spreads, let alone the clearing house instructing her/his broker to 
  close out her/his positions.Over-confidence can undermine the other 
  components of confidence over time.    So over-confidence is 
  not just a 'disaster waiting to happen', it can also undermine real confidence 
  in its wake.   An analogy for over-trading based on 
  over-confidence again might be the teenage driver who thinks he/she can go 
  round corners at 120 miles an hour on public roads and survive.   
  The ensuing crash (this time or next) might dent the confidence in driving for 
  years to come.The common features in these analogies 
  is:        -       lack 
  of 
  experience,        -       lack 
  of learning from experience.Shallow confidence can lead 
  to:        -       'pulling 
  the trigger' 
  problems,        -       over-riding 
  trading 
  signals,        -       going 
  for 
  tips,        -       increased 
  stress,        -       trend-followers 
  'cutting profits 
  short',        -       ego 
  damage,        -       self-sabotage,        -       ...Over-confidence 
  can lead 
  to:        -       over-trading,        -       increased 
  stress,        -       ignoring 
  warning 
  signs,        -       feelings 
  of 
  invulnerability,        -       ego 
  damage,        -       self-sabotage,        -       ...So 
  to build deep-rooted, reality based confidence is a matter 
  of:        -       gaining 
  sufficient 
  experience,        -       learning 
  to learn from 
  experience,        -       using 
  learnings skills and experience in focused areas.Gaining Sufficient 
  ExperienceThis is probably the key reason why most traders fail - 
  they trade with the big-boys without the gaining sufficient 
  experience.I will use equity index markets as an 
  example.    Similar concepts apply to other 
  instruments.A typical unit size traded on equity index markets is $500 
  a point.    Even so-called 'mini' contracts are $50 a 
  point.This is just too big for most new players to gain the experience 
  and preserve their capital while gaining that experience.The result is 
  a drop-out rate of 95% who have learnt something but are not quite sure what 
  they have learnt.    Some come back for more when they have 
  saved more capital, still not realising the problem of trade 
  size.    They have not heard of risk of ruin calculations, and 
  anyway, they did not come to trading to do that kind of 
  work.Experience takes time.    So to get the experience 
  of trading without being shunted out of the game prematurely, traders need to 
  learn on an inexpensive field of play.   Technology has come 
  to the rescue.     Internet dealers exist where you can 
  place a 1 cent a point play on the S & P 500.    That is 
  5,000 times smaller than the 'mini' contract and 50,000 times smaller than the 
  full-sized contract.If a 1 cent trade up trade on the S&P 500 is 
  placed and the index falls to zero before the trader can exit, he/she has just 
  lost the price of a cheap restaurant meal.    Not his/her 
  ego.   Not his/her entire trading capital.Experience is now 
  available more cheaply by over a 1,000 fold - yet many traders do not take the 
  opportunity - some prefer the ego value of playing in the big-boys game, 
  others are just ignorant of alternatives.They are perhaps in denial of 
  the need for time to gain experience, or are ignorant of the opportunities 
  afforded by the internet, and many will pay the price of loss of participation 
  in the trading game or worse.The internet can also save traders costs 
  as real-time prices (updates every 20 seconds or better) are provided free of 
  charge.   Also the equivalent of a $20 (or more) brokerage round 
  turn can be less than five cents.So lack of experience is no longer a 
  function of availability of capital or opportunity - more a reluctance to see 
  yourself as 'in training' and act accordingly.Learning from 
  ExperienceAt school we are rarely taught how to learn.It 
  is just, mostly falsely, assumed we have learnt how to learn at 
  home.To learn from experience we have to digest that 
  experience.Most of us are too shallow to fully digest the implications 
  of our experiences and to modify our beliefs and behaviours to effectively 
  learn from any experience.Common aspects of shallow learning 
  include:        -       wallowing 
  in emotions (just fun you know and showing 
  off),        -       not 
  realising the importance of 
  timing,        -       not 
  knowing about the power of our 
  beliefs,        -       unwilling 
  to change our 
  beliefs,        -       not 
  knowing how to change 
  beliefs,        -       unwilling 
  to modify our 
  behaviour,        -       unaware 
  of how to consolidate behavioural 
  change,        -       ...You 
  have perhaps learned how to learn 
  when:        -       you 
  understand some of your inner tendencies that stop you 
  learning,        -       you 
  love 
  learning,        -       you 
  have an inkling of how much you still have to 
  learn,        -       even 
  traders who are not in learning mode and talk of nothing but their 
                  last 
  entry and forecast have something to teach 
  you,        -       ...Focusing 
  on Key AreasTo make best use of our experiences, we need to use 
  the time wisely, spending as much time and using as much experience as 
  possible on fruitful learning processes.Practical areas for focusing 
  on learning skills that directly impact confidence levels 
  include:        -       understanding 
  market 
  behaviours,        -       designing 
  trading systems/methodologies that are coherent with 
           identified 
  market 
  behaviours,        -       understanding 
  effective trader 
  behaviours,        -       modifying 
  your trader behaviour to be congruent with identified effective 
                trader 
  behaviours.There are several techniques that have a direct impact on 
  confidence 
  including:        -       risk 
  of ruin 
  considerations,        -       position 
  sizing 
  ideas,        -       service 
  concepts,        -       ...SummaryOh, 
  that I was wise enough to know this about 20 years ago.   I would 
  have developed as a trader much more rapidly and enjoyed life more.In 
  practice, I was not ready for this information - I was too shallow in too many 
  aspects for much of it to stick.Are you ready?Do you know any 
  later or better stages - if so why not share your experience and wisdom 
  instead of lurking?Unconditional regards, Ric.<A 
  href="http://www.traderscalm.com/"; eudora="autourl">www.traderscalm.com 
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