Another somewhat off topic post, forwarded to me with excerpts taken from the futures newsgroups. Again I feel this may be of interest to some traders. I believe this was written by Gary Smith. Good luck! nextrade!
Subject: What it takes to become a successful trader.
I struggled for so many years that I will forever have this self image of myself as a small time break-even trader. I spent more years than I care to remember with an account that fluctuated between $2000 and $4500. I traded stocks, I traded options, I traded warrants, and I traded futures. I went through the usual evolutionary process all traders must endure. Always thinking there was some magic formula, system, methodology, or better yet, some magical trader who had the answers. I wanted so badly to trade for a living. That was my dream, just as I suppose it is the dream of many who "hang out' in this newsgroup. But I stumbled blindly in pursuit of that dream because I never set any goals on how to get there. That all changed in 1985. I began making money. Then each year a little more than the previous year. In late 1986, I began rolling my futures profits into trading mutual funds. Trading mutual funds is no different than trading stock futures. Whether you are trading futures, options, stocks, or funds, you still have to buy as near the lows as possible, ride the profits for as long as you can, then sell as near the highs as possible. It's just a matter of personal choice which weapon you choose. Finally, the snowball effect kicked in. The larger my capital base became from my trading profits, the greater became those trading profits. Hope that makes sense. I never aspired to be like Larry Williams. (who believe it or not I like and respect) Larry will be the first to admit he is a boom or bust trader. if I ever busted, I wouldn't be able to come back psychologically. I was more concerned with *never* having losing months. (I average about one losing month per 26 months) than how much I was making. I see, read, and hear of the hot-shot traders bragging about their big trading scores but then I always see them give it back. And please, I'm talking about home-based traders here. I'm not talking about the CTAs, hedge fund managers or Chicago and New York based traders. I remember when I was thrilled to make $10,000 annually. Then I was thrilled to make $18,000. In the mid-1990s, I got stuck for awhile in the $40,000 to $50,000 range. I figured that was to be my destiny, which was fine enough for me. But I broke out in 1996 making $72,000. I cracked $100,000 in 1997 making $113,000. Last year I made $195,000. People say "sure, but how large is your trading account now?. My response is I had only $2200 and 13 cents in my account on March 13, 1985. That is forever posted on my refrigerator door. So what does it take to become a successful trader? *Extensive* academic knowledge (like in trading books) combined with *intensive* real time trading experiences (like in many years) Only then can you learn your strengths and weaknesses and find out what works and what doesn't for you. Then you can go about the task of developing your own winning trading strategy. Yeah, you read that correctly. Developing your strategy comes last in the equation. (By the way, paper trading and simulated trading is worthless. Don't waste your time) A lot of traders tell me they have spent a lifetime studying as well as trading, yet still can't beat the game. That's where the last piece of the puzzle comes into play. *RISK* You have to be able to assume risk as well as manage that risk. Most traders are either too risk averse to ever become consistent winners or conversely, they have too much of a gamblers mentality. I probably could be debated on this, but risk is a "childhood thing." It may even be an innate thing. Just as I possess no mathematical skills and thus could never become a physicist or scientist, very few possess the proper risk skills to ever become successful traders. There are a lot of academics and vendors who have superb analytical trading minds, yet can't trade their way out of a paper bag. And that's not meant as a derogatory comment. As for my methodology, I have none. I trade pure price action. And no, that doesn't mean I'm simply a trend trader. Nothing wrong with trend trading except most trend followers get in too late and out too late. That explains the mediocre performance of the CTAs and hedge fund managers since 80% of them are trend traders. I've wondered long and hard why after so many years I suddenly began making money so consistently. It's because I threw away the charts, oscillators, gave up on the Gann, the cycles, the waves, Fibonnaci -everything. Now I'm not suggesting there's anything wrong with those methodologies. They, like me, look to trade price action. As Jack Schwager says, some of those methodologies are probably worthless, but they seem to work because the traders who use them have developed some sort of intuitive experience about price. But they are looking at price through the tinted glasses of their particular methodology. I'm successful because I look at price in it purest form and without an intervening methodology as a go-between. Does that make sense to anyone? So why do I hang out here and trash some people? Because I understand through a lot of years and hard work, the realities of successfully trading for a living. Why shouldn't I offer my two cents worth when the blowhards who are simply clueless start pontificating about what it takes to succeed? Much of what I read here and places like Futures magazine and TASC about the trading game is pure myth. It boggles my mind to find so many with no trading expertise claim they have the answers for the newbies. |