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Stock and Option Millionaire Principles

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by Jason Ng -  Oct 9, 2006
6.9 (from 22 ratings)

PRINCIPLE 6
GAUGE YOUR EMOTIONAL CAPACITY BEFORE INCREASING CAPITAL OUTLAY
You know by now how different paper trading and real stock and options trading are, don’t you?

In the very same way, after you get used to trading real money consistently, you find it extremely different when you increase your capital by ten fold, don’t you?

What, then, is the difference? The difference is in the emotional burden that comes with the possibility of losing more and more real money. This happens when you cross from paper trading to real trading and also when you increase your capital after some successes.

After a while, most traders realize their maximum capacity in both dollars and emotion. Are you comfortable trading up to a few thousand or tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands? Know your capacity before committing the funds.

PRINCIPLE 7
YOU ARE A NOVICE AT EVERY TRADE
Ever felt like an expert after a few wins and then lose a lot on the next stock or options trade?

Overconfidence and the false sense of invincibility based on past wins is a recipe for disaster. All professionals respect their next trade and go through all the proper steps of their stock or options strategy before entry. Treat every trade as the first trade you have ever made in your life. Never deviate from your stock or options strategy. Never.

PRINCIPLE 8
YOU ARE YOUR FORMULA TO SUCCESS OR FAILURE
Ever followed a successful stock or options strategy only to fail badly?
You are the one who determines whether a strategy succeeds or fails. Your personality and your discipline make or break the strategy that you use not vice versa. Like Robert Kiyosaki says, “The investor is the asset or the liability, not the investment.”
Understanding yourself first will lead to eventual success.

PRINCIPLE 9
CONSISTENCY
Have you ever changed your mind about how to implement a strategy? When you make changes day after day, you end up catching nothing but the wind.

Stock market fluctuations have more variables than can be mathematically formulated. By following a proven strategy, we are assured that someone successful has stacked the odds in our favor. When you review both winning and losing trades, determine whether the entry, management, and exit met every criteria in the strategy and whether you have followed it precisely before changing anything.

In conclusion…
I hope these simple guidelines that have led my ship out of the harshest of seas and into the best harvests of my life will guide you too. Good Luck.

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Comment on this Article

Recent Comments:
I think it re-inforces the fact that you have to be absolutely resolute about sticking to your trading strategy and not be swayed away fom it by the suggestions and opinions of other traders. Too many traders abondon successful strategies because they think that there is a better more profitable system out there than the one they are trading. This thought process often occurs after their strategy has hit a losing run, as all strategies do from time to time. Damian
damianoakley   14-10-2006 06:21:52
Ditto bracke. This article summarises most of the principles I have read about very successful traders.
bigbadrob   14-10-2006 05:46:53
Of course, depending on their own targets, stop losses, and method relative to their individual systems. Damian
damianoakley   09-10-2006 08:29:25
Both can profit from 'that particular trade', of course. Quote: Originally Posted by damianoakley Interesting article. It's those two different opinions that creates two sides of a market and it's those same differing opinions that create discussion boards like Trade2Win. I think the key point to take from the article is that 2 traders can have different opinions on the market and still profit - perhaps not both on that...
FXSCALPER2   09-10-2006 08:12:58
Interesting article. It's those two different opinions that creates two sides of a market and it's those same differing opinions that create discussion boards like Trade2Win. I think the key point to take from the article is that 2 traders can have different opinions on the market and still profit - perhaps not both on that particular trade, but over the long term. Thanks Damian
damianoakley   09-10-2006 07:16:39

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