Happy New Year TradingView Family - 13 dos and don'ts!Hello TradingView Family, this is Richard, and I want to wish you all a Happy New Year!
Here are the main pieces of advice I would give to myself when I first started. Let me know your thoughts...
📉 1- Stop searching for signals, fund management services.
You chose trading to be your own boss, don't insist on being a follower.
If 90% of traders lose money, then to be profitable, you should stay away from the crowd and trade differently.
The only way to make money in trading, is to learn how to trade by yourself and to be in full control of your account .
📊 2- Think quality, not quantity.
You don’t have to trade every week, you don’t have to catch every trade. 2-3 trades per week are enough for a healthy consistent account growth.
We are snipers, we wait patiently for the perfect shot, and let the machine-gunners/traders die at the front row.
💻 3- We are Risk managers, not only traders.
While trading is nothing but a game of probabilities; Your main job is to find a well-defined strategy that gives you an edge over the market.
Keep in mind that your strategy has to be objective / rule-based.
💰 4- Do not doubt your strategy or entry just because your fellow traders offline/online disagree with your position direction.
Be fully confident in yourself and your trading plan.
🗒 5- Stop searching for new methodologies.
If your strategy is working for you Then focus on developing it. You have got a money machine.
Just like when you get married. You chose to spend the rest of your life with your partner, knowing that you may find someone better, smarter, more beautiful… but you are done searching. (Unless you want to cheat on your partner lol)
🕝 6- Think long term => 6 months – 1 Year NOT Daily– Weekly.
🔒 7- Always use stop-loss
Trading without a stop loss is like driving without a seat belt. One accident might ruin your life.
✏️ 8- Enter with fixed risk per trade.
Not fixed lot, not fixed number of pips => Professional traders think risk NOT pips.
💡 9- Treat the market like a trader, not an investor.
Don’t get attached to one single trade. It is just one in a lengthy series of trades.
⚙️ 10- If you are not feeling well, don’t trade.
👑 11- Stay humble, or you will be humbled by the market.
♟ 12- We do not predict, we simply speculate and react.
Just like chess, let the market make the first move and then react accordingly.
💂 13- Find a mentor.
Learn from those who are more experienced than you and surround yourself with talent; By keeping an eye on how veteran traders invest, you’ll begin to understand how they think and make crucial trading decisions.
Again, Happy New Year Everyone! May 2023 be the best of all! 🎊
Always follow your trading plan regarding entry, risk management, and trade management.
And Remember: All Strategies Are Good; If Managed Properly!
~Rich
Resolution
The unknown obvious: resolution vs timeframeChart resolution and chart timeframes are the synonyms, true, but the difference between resolution based mindset and timeframe based mindset is huge.
As it is in reality, pure charts are just tick charts that then get aggregated, mostly by time. So it's all the same data, just different amount in different detail.
If you operate manually you free to scroll through all the resolutions, generally from lower to higher to gain all the information you need in best possible way.
So you mindset is this, "I need more info ima be scrolling through resolutions and be gaining it".
The term "timeframe" is much more applicable for automated trading.
There, it's very complicated to use multiple resolutions at the same time for many reasons, instead it's easier to use multiple data ranges within one resolution.
For example, you run a bot (not robot) on 1 minute chart, this bot executes & fine tunes the signals based on very short window of 4 datapoints, generates the actual signals based on 16 datapoint window, chooses a signal generation method based on 64 last datapoints, and chooses between competing assets based window length 256.
Then you ran an ensemble of these bots on every 'timeframe', this way you can emulate but never achieve a proper manual operation.
And it's good to use common but different methods on each of data windows to reduce correlations inside the ensemble, not like it's shown on my chart (disregard the levels).
New Year 2022's Resolutions for All TRADERS_*__*___*____*_____*______*_______* HAPPY NEW YEAR _______* ______*_____*____*__*_
0-set your own prioritizes again:
1-Get to know yourself better before trading .
2-Get healthier in all aspects.
3-Forgive yourself for your previous failings.
4-Break large goals down into smaller ones.
5-Upgrade your trading plan
6-Discipline to new Trading Plan
7-Diligently Making Analysis
8-Improve on your risk management strategy
9-begin with a demo testing .
10-Keep your goals focused on performance, not capital necessarily .
11-Track your progress
12-minimize your risks and Cut Losses Short
13-know when to be aggressive and when to be defensive in trading
14-maximize your profit and Let The Winners Run
15-distantce your ego and emotional reactions from your trading
16-Go beyond by auto-trading(algorithmic-trading
17-Reward yourself for sticking with your resolutions.
18-take away from misleading social medias
19-consistancy and perseverance are vital
20-define right position sizing for your strategy
21-foces more on your risk/reward ratio not high wining rate
22-create a great watchlist and trade on a few, and never overtrade