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Is there any simple steps i can follow to learn it "from the scratch" till I can really understand when I enter the trade and when to close the transaction?

thx to all...
Best regards

Yes, if you're willing to stop trading until you learn what it is you want to learn. Otherwise, you will likely continue to try one thing after another, all of which will be complete mysteries to you, until you run out of money.

Db
 
Yes, if you're willing to stop trading until you learn what it is you want to learn. Otherwise, you will likely continue to try one thing after another, all of which will be complete mysteries to you, until you run out of money.

Well, of course, entering forex world and running out my money is not what I want, db... :D
I am totally curious by those profitable trader who gain profit from their trades. And I am sure, it's not about 'just use your guts or just a feeling to take an action', right?
Well, i'm more believe it, that it's by various analysis which support their decisions. Though, of course, I admit, there are people who is just gambling with forex...

Thanks,
 
Hi,

I'm really new to all of this and am slowly but surely learning, I think. My background in a nutshell is that I graduated from uni last year and although I'm not from a financial background, I am currently studying for a CeFA and working in the City.

If anybody is interested in having a play around ABN-AMRO are doing a cool little competition which enables you to practice your trading skills (link below). Thanks to this I have successfully confirmed that I have absolutely no idea what the hell I am doing :)

One thing that strikes me about trading initially is the extensive amount of terminology used and differing ways data is represented via charts. I suppose time and patience is the best remedy for this though.

BTW - I'm not someone who is interested in trading to make lots of money etc etc. I'd just quite like to understand the system, if not just understand it a bit better. Not sure if I asked a question here but what Im really looking for is some INITIAL direction. I've read through a lot of the articles on here and looked through the beginner forums and although helpful, for an outsider they can still be foreign.

Cheers
 
Well, of course, entering forex world and running out my money is not what I want, db... :D
I am totally curious by those profitable trader who gain profit from their trades. And I am sure, it's not about 'just use your guts or just a feeling to take an action', right?
Well, i'm more believe it, that it's by various analysis which support their decisions. Though, of course, I admit, there are people who is just gambling with forex...

Thanks,

No, it's not about feelings. It's about studying whatever it is you are interested in trading, learning how price moves, determining how best to take advantage of these moves. It's not about indicators and somebody else's system. It's about learning your business, and you can't do that if you're so gripped by fear and doubt and anxiety that you can't act, assuming that you know what to do in the first place.

So, again, stop. Study whatever it is that you want to trade. Learn everything there is to know about it, whether it's stocks or bonds or options or futures or forex or whatever. Develop a consistently profitable trading strategy. Then start making your money.

The following may help, if you're willing to put forth the effort (and you'll find that people are more willing to help you if they see that you are in fact putting forth that effort and not just asking for instructions):


The Trading Journal


In order to succeed at trading, you must have an edge. Your edge begins with the knowledge you gain through your research and testing that a particular price pattern or market behavior offers a level of predictability and a risk to reward ratio that provides a consistently profitable outcome over time. Without it, one is just "playing" the market in order to have something to talk about on message boards. To get it, you have to know exactly what you're looking for and what to do with it once you've found it. This process is what the journal is all about.

The journal goes through several stages depending on where you are. Once you've decided where you want to concentrate your efforts (at this level, the journal may resemble a diary), then you begin the process of developing a system (or method, strategy, procedure, whatever you want to call it). Here the journal takes on a different character. Once you've developed a tentative/preliminary system, you begin testing/trading it, and the journal adopts a still different character.

The first step is to decide what kind of trader you want to be.

* What do you want to accomplish with your trading? Is it recreational? Supplementary income? A part-time job? Do you want to make a living at it? Even the greenest of the green knows whether or not he wants to make a living at it, trade only part time, trade for recreation, trade for the action, trade to have something to talk about with other traders (for whatever reason), trade only long enough to earn money to do or buy X.

* Do you have any idea what sort of trading is most comfortable? Long or intermediate-term trading? Short-term trading? Day-trading? Trend-trading? Scalping? (Note here that a short-term trader, for example, does not become a long-term trader just because his stop was hit and he didn't sell; a long-term trader doesn't become a short-term trader because he chickened out and sold too soon. Each of these approaches are selected deliberately and for thoroughly-considered reasons.) How patient are you? How adventurous? Are you a leader or a follower (most people think they're leaders)?

The second step is to decide what you're going to trade and when you're going to trade it.

* Have you found an instrument -- futures, stocks, ETFs, bonds, options -- that provides you with the range and volatility you require but also the safety that enables you to relax and trade in an objective and rational manner?

* Have you yet found a time (5m, hourly, weekly) or tick (1t, 200t) or volume (1K, 100K) interval that gives you enough trading opportunities but also gives you enough time to think about what you're doing? If you want to limit your trading to the "morning", are you physically and psychologically prepared to trade all day? If not, can you shrug off whatever opportunities you may miss by limiting the amount of time you spend trading?

The third step is to develop your system*.

A system consists of (a) a set of rules that you use to select profitable positions and (b) a set of rules that you use to manage the trade once you're in it. (*Note: again, whether you call it a system, a method, a strategy, a plan, a scheme, an approach, a procedure, or a modus operandi is not as important as sitting down and doing it.)

* Developing a system begins with deciding just what it is you're looking for. Therefore, begin by studying price movement in real time (or at the end of the day through "replay", if your charting program offers it). By "study", I mean to observe it with intent, not just read about it or listen to somebody talk about it. Note the conditions under which price rises, falls, drifts. Make every effort to avoid imposing your biases onto what you observe. You may see trading as a war, a competition, a game, or a puzzle. You may think you're out to kill somebody, outwit somebody, or are out only to detect the flow and slip into it, riding the waves as if you were sailing. None of this should be allowed to affect what you observe.

* Develop a set of preliminary hypotheses which exploit the profit opportunities presented by these movements, e.g. price began trending "here". Price broke out "there". Price reversed "there". What can I do to take advantage of that? What do I have to look for?

* Decide what strategy will best take advantage of what you think you've found. Are you looking to catch a reversal in the hopes that it will become a trend? Or are you looking to trade series of reversals within the day's or week's range? Or do you prefer to wait for a breakout and trade what may become a trend? Or would you rather wait for a retracement in what may be shaping up to be a trend? Limit yourself to only one strategy at the beginning.

* Carefully define the setup which implements this strategy, preferably using old charts (attempting to define the setup by studying realtime charts is inefficient since you don't yet know what it is that you're looking for). This is called "backtesting". All else flows from this. Unless you know what you're looking for, you cannot test it, much less screen for it. If you have not tested it, you have no idea of the probability of its success. With no idea of the probability of success, any trades made are essentially guesses.

Therefore, focus on the setup. One setup. Determine its characteristics. Define it so specifically and so thoroughly that you can recognize it without any doubt whatsoever in real time. Decide provisionally where best to enter, what the target ought to be, where the stop should be placed, and so on. Only after the setup is defined and tested (and it can't, ipso facto, be tested until it's been defined) can one even begin to think about trading it with real money, much less trading multiple setups. Attempting to shortcut this process merely expands the amount of time it will take to develop the necessary skills. Nothing is gained by painting the house before scraping it, cleaning it, and priming it since you'll have to do it all over again sooner rather than later.

* Forward-test what you have so far, again using old charts, preferably replaying them (if replay is not available to you, then scroll through them, bar by bar). In other words, "pre-test" the setup. Make whatever modifications are necessary to the setup, i.e., re-examine and re-define your strategy. Address risk management, trade management, money management in further detail. Determine the ratio of winning trades to losing trades (you will, of course, have to define "winner" and "loser", which is where risk management and trade management come in). Determine the ratio of profit to loss. Determine the maximum loss. Determine the maximum number of consecutive losers.


Note that beginners often use "win/loss" to combine two separate considerations into one, and failing to keep them separate can create problems. One is win:lose. The other is profit:loss. Between the two, the "lose" and the "loss" have two distinct meanings. Win:lose refers to the ratio of winning trades to losing trades. Profit:loss means, expectedly, the ratio of profit to loss.​


You'll read that the % of winners can be less than the % of losers as long as the winners are sufficiently profitable, one's management is superior, etc. And, yes, theoretically, one can "win" less than 50% of the time if his profits sufficiently outweigh his losses. But if your real-time real-money test begins with a string of the losses anticipated by your backtest, you'll be out of the game almost before it begins. In fact, one can be left high and dry even if his % of wins outnumber his % of losses, as mentioned above, if there is insufficient control of the amount of loss OR if the losses occur in sufficiently high numbers at the beginning of the trial.Then there are commissions and assorted trading costs to take into account, which is why traders who actually trade find that, without size, all the postulations about percentage don't mean much in practice.​

* Paper-trade this plan, in a simulated environment, as a semi-final test, until you are satisfied that it performs at least as well as it did during the previous testing phase. This may take several months or more depending on how many trials you perform. If your plan is not consistently profitable, go back however many steps are necessary to arrive at a potential solution. (See also Making High Probability Trades.)

* Trade the plan using real money in real time, spending only what is absolutely necessary on "tools" (currently -- 2006 -- this is SierraCharts with an IB feed) and trading the minimum number of shares, contracts, etc., allowable. If your plan is not consistently profitable, go back however many steps are necessary to arrive at a potential solution. Recalculate your win rate and profit:loss ratio on a continuing basis.

* If your plan is consistently profitable in practice, increase your size to what is a comfortable level, maintaining a continuous loop of re-appraisal and re-evaluation. When things come unglued, back up as far as necessary to regain your footing.


Novices rarely do any of this. They borrow something from somebody or somewhere and perhaps modify it somewhat, but they rarely go through the defining and testing process themselves. Some just try whatever seems like a good idea and hope for the best.

If one has absolutely no idea where to begin, there is nothing wrong with using a canned strategy IF it is used only as a point of departure. In other words, the canned strategy, regardless of what it is or what claims are made for it, still has to be tested, which often entails taking what is unexpectedly vague to begin with and defining it to a level of specificity that enables the testing to take place (it should come as no surprise that those who do go through the process succeed and those who don't, struggle, often to the point of being driven out of the market). Examples of canned strategies that are reasonably well-defined include the Darvas Box, the Ross Hook, the Opening Range Breakout, O'Neil's Cup With Handle, Dunnigan's One-Way Formula. Some of these are more vague than others and will require considerable work on definition before they can be tested. But they serve as points of departure.

Recommended Books:

Winning the Mental Game on Wall Street (aka General Semantics of Wall Street)
by John Magee (see my review)


The Nature of Risk/How to Buy/When to Sell
by Justin Mamis (see my reviews)


And if you're greener than green . . .

The Wall Street Journal Complete Money and Investing Guidebook

or

Standard and Poor's Guide to Money and Investing
 
wow...
i gain a lot of precious knowledge here about how to 'real' trade, profitable trade.
Yes, I am currently learning and learning about it. But maybe i'm entering the realtime trading too soon before i really feel '100% prepared' for my system.
Actually i have tested it on demo account and found that i could get more profitable trades than losing ones.
Thanks for your sharing and hope will never be bored for helping me and a lot of them who is maybe same with me :)

Best regard,
 
Intraday Technical Analysis

Hello,
I started working as an equities day trader at a prop firm about 6 months ago. I recently started trying to incorporate technical analysis into my trades. Most of the strategies I have been reading about seem to be based on time frames of weeks or months. I was wondering if anyone could shed some light of how important technical analysis is for intraday trades and what strategies work best. Anything to get me going in the right direction will help.
Thanks
 
I was wondering if anyone could shed some light of how important technical analysis is for intraday trades and what strategies work best.

If by "technical analysis", you mean indicators, not very. OTOH, if by "technical analysis", you mean price action, extremely.

Click the link below my name for further information.

Db
 
I am a new member. I can't seem to locate the proper place to ask a question. I have two questions: 1. Where is the proper place on this site to ask a question? 2. Does any one have any comments to make concerning the advisory service named EOD Traders?

boyiam
 
mip,

You would do well to follow up on what db's said. Stop using money (its just gambling if you don't have a tested plan). Learn a lot. But if you learn about support and resistance (be it "real" with horizontal lines or "possible" with trendlines or my preference, parallel channels created from trendlines) and waste no time on all the lower region indicators (macd, stoch etc which are NOT magic but just derivatives of price) you won't take an unnecessarily long time.

Interestingly the largest channel I drew on yesterday has held so far. I would looked at the 2nd entry where I show you if I was a gbp.usd trader (but don't try it without developing a plan).
.

PS. For the other questioner: advisory services wouldn't give advice if they could actually trade (why give away the edge) which should tell you all you need to know about all of them. Learn to trade yourself or find a mutual fund.
 

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Dear nine,

All my vision was refreshed after reading a lot in this forum and sharing with other forex masters. And i began to get my grip ^_^
Well, still need time to test my own system, but by using my own analysis, last night i earn 2 profitable trades on GBP/USD

(time in GMT+7):
9:05 pM long - 1.9845 closed 9:55pM 1.9903 === 58 pips
1:08 AM short 1.9888 closed 2:46 at 1.9841 === 47 pips

but still, like I said, need some time to test it so it's proved as reliable system, at least for myself :D

thx to all :)

Best regard,
 
Hi,
I have just registered and all my hopes have gone up in smoke!! I work 9 to 5 and was sent information through the post about forex trading from Canonbury Publishing and thought maybe I could begin trading and hopefully go full time in the future. The system was Louise Woof's earlybird one and you even get a money back guarantee with it so you can actually paper trade for 30 days.
I thought this would be genuine but on this forum people are saying its a waste of time!! Surely if she allows you to test it, it cannot be that bad? Today I got sent something again about a system called Don't tell the Professionals. I am totally confused so hopefully someone can point me in the right direction. I have never traded before and was hoping to start with a meagre bank of £200!!
Hope someone can help -many thanks.
Joogy
 
mip,

Glad to hear, I was feeling some guilt when the channel held.

Joogy,

You may be one who can benefit from someone elses system. Most can't, either because the system is rubbish, because it relied on some intuition from the developer, or because it doesn't suit there own psych makeup so they can't trade it well.

Read threads about other systems on the site and you'll get the message. The best strategies are ones you build yourself based on your own work and testing. You can find plenty of valid ideas to start you off either here or at forexfactory (they go a bit indicator nutty over there --- a sure sign of newbies but Jacko's thread is useful material).
 
Joogy,

Don't pay for anything - all these courses are bllushti.

Everything you need to learn is free on the internet; T2W has plenty of material, and experts of whom you could ask questions (like Mr Nine above).

Grant.
 
NewBie - Commodity Futures

This new sticky thread is targeted to all new members and existing members who are making their first posts.

In this thread, feel free to ask ANY question relating to trading, however simple you think it is. Our forum advisors and more senior members will be happy to answer them for you! :smart:

:!: If you think your question requires more than a quick reply, it's best to create a new thread in the appropriate forum, so that a discussion about it can develop.

Hi All,
I am a new trader and am currently getting my hands on Commodity Future Trading [Comex/Nymex].
I am currently using eSignal, but is a very expensive affair - considering being a newbie to trading. Are there any less expensive, but reliable real time data providers for Comex/Nymex and at the same time support feed plugin for AmiBroker.

Have read a lot about the speed and versatility of AmiBroker and hence would like to use it with a reliable but less expensive service. QuoteCenter from Reuters seems to offer better real time feed but does not have any plugin for AmiBorker (except DDE which does not backfill) [i had tried a 30 day paid demo for it also].

Any suggestions please....
 
Glad to hear, I was feeling some guilt when the channel held.

Don't feel like that, nine :)
Well, probability has only two sides: Yes or No
based on my situation yesterday, well I thought closing the short was the safest way (coz when the price keep rising I'd burn myself down hehe); I still have enough free margin to trade and still have a lot of time to learn and of couse, after i'm ready at some point, i will gain it back (hopefully) :cheesy:

Anyway, it's a precious thing to learn, as I said. Well, hope will never repeat the same mistake :)

Thanks.

Best regards,
 
Paper Trading Account Needed

Hi All

I am hoping you can help me.

I am new to trading and have firstly been reading up before I invest my money. I am looking to trade 'normal' shares in LSE and the higher CAP companies in the AIM market.

I am using ADVFN to research my companies amounsgt other thing sbut I know I have a long way to go.

I am looking for a decent paper trading account that is not a free trial - want it to be unlimited and as realistic as possible.

Please can someone lend there expertise to me for a moment and advise me of your thoughts

Thanks

Peter
 
Hi,
I have just registered and all my hopes have gone up in smoke!! I work 9 to 5 and was sent information through the post about forex trading from Canonbury Publishing and thought maybe I could begin trading and hopefully go full time in the future. The system was Louise Woof's earlybird one and you even get a money back guarantee with it so you can actually paper trade for 30 days.
I thought this would be genuine but on this forum people are saying its a waste of time!! Surely if she allows you to test it, it cannot be that bad? Today I got sent something again about a system called Don't tell the Professionals. I am totally confused so hopefully someone can point me in the right direction. I have never traded before and was hoping to start with a meagre bank of £200!!
Hope someone can help -many thanks.
Joogy

This was like me many, many years ago, except I put down REAL money. None of it worked, none of it. Some worked for a while (1 - 2 months) and then a complete catastrophe!!

I'm sorry to have to tell you that in this game, you are ultimately on your own, no matter who or what tells you otherwise. We can show you the door, but you have to walk through it.

Those that are selling systems and tips have their OWN agendas, and the last thing on their mind is your welfare. You simply cannot trust them.

Now on the other side, and I might some stick for this, are those who have made it and became consistently profitable. But they cannot - and will not - give away their secrets. What they do are to give hints and pointers for you to get to where they are if you "deserve" it. I can say no more than this.
 
This was like me many, many years ago, except I put down REAL money. None of it worked, none of it. Some worked for a while (1 - 2 months) and then a complete catastrophe!!

I'm sorry to have to tell you that in this game, you are ultimately on your own, no matter who or what tells you otherwise. We can show you the door, but you have to walk through it.

Those that are selling systems and tips have their OWN agendas, and the last thing on their mind is your welfare. You simply cannot trust them.

Now on the other side, and I might some stick for this, are those who have made it and became consistently profitable. But they cannot - and will not - give away their secrets. What they do are to give hints and pointers for you to get to where they are if you "deserve" it. I can say no more than this.

This brings to mind something I read not long ago:

Alex and I were just in Vegas speaking at a seminar for the Traders' Expo. The room was silent and tumbleweed went by as topics such as mental discipline, money management and psychology were discussed. The slides switched to the trading setups and instantly the whole crowd perked up like watching an accident happen in real time on the highway. They wanted to know "does this guru have the holy grail??" What they do not realize is the first "boring" part of the seminar is the holy grail.


There are no secrets. More than a few members have laid out in detail everything one needs to know to make more money than he knows what to do with. But unless the toddler is taken by the hand and told Enter here and Exit there, he considers the information to be worthless; it "doesn't work".

The secret is doing the work. But to nearly all beginners, "doing the work" means finding the newsletter, trading room, advisory service, off-the-shelf system, course, indicator suite, etc. that will make them rich with no effort and no risk.

If it's true that 95% of traders fail, it's not because trading is insurmountably difficult; it's because 95% of traders just don't try.

Db
 
Thanks for the reply, I am cautious of all the systems and get rich quick schemes and that is why I want to trade paper money, so if I lose it it is not real.

I am struggling to find someone who is good at this and does not chardge for this service.

Is this possible please?
 
I am struggling to find someone who is good at this and does not charge for this service. Is this possible please?
Hi TALENT4321,
Welcome to T2W.
What exactly are you looking for? The options are numerous: these are some of them . . .
1. Someone to mentor you in your trading.
2. Someone who teaches how they trade (i.e. a style that may - or may not - suite you).
3. A newsletter or alert service of some kind.
4. Someone who will trade your account for you.
Almost always, anyone offering any of the above will charge for their services. If you want something for free, then you've come to the right place. This site is completely free and there are some very good, knowledgable and experienced traders on here to help you. Take note od dbphoenix's post above and be very clear about what it is that you want. It'll make your search that much easier and faster.
Tim.
 
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