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Here are three common problems that I've observed among experienced, talented traders who are struggling to get to that ever-beckoning next level of performance:

1) Position Sizing - They don't take their largest risk when they have their greatest feel for the market and conviction about direction. Very high confidence trades may be sized relatively small; lower confidence trades are sized too large (often to make money back from earlier losses). They are taking their biggest cuts at the plate when the ball is out of their strike zones;

2) Execution - They wait for markets to go up before they buy and to go down before they sell. As a result, they get in at prices that leave them unusually subject to pullbacks. Many times, particularly if the trades are sized large (see above), the heat will take them out of good trades. In short, they're not patient about getting into positions; they chase moves, fearful that they'll miss a profit opportunity;

3) Rigidity - They don't adapt to changing markets. They look for big moves in markets with declining volatility; they trade breakouts when signs point to range conditions. They set stops and profit targets in ways that don't adapt to shifting volatility. They expect the market to accommodate what they're doing rather than vice versa.

How much money you make is a function of what you trade and how you trade it. Many traders will switch what they trade (markets, stocks, time frames), only to continue making the same mistakes outlined above. Getting into good risk/reward trades and then maximizing the risk/reward while the positions are on is a major driver of long-term trading success.

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2
  •  
    You've hit the nail right on the head ,Brett
    2009 Oct 27 05:16 PM Reply
  •  
    good post Dr. Brett!

    ... just off the top, would add 'not understanding how:'

    1) financial markets work;
    2) technical analysis works;
    3) the most rudimentary technical indicators/ oscillators and sentiment metrics work; and
    4) the masterful teachings of authors like yourself, Van Tharp, Corey Rosenbloom, Ari Kiev and Mark Douglas provide THE actual foundation for ANY successful/ proper trading psyche.

    www.fibozachi.com/nons...

    Moving Average Methodologies, the "Stochastic Default Club," the “Fixed Period Drop-off Effect" and the Four Basic Qualities of Great Technical Indicators
    2009 Nov 25 10:17 PM Reply