bustergrey said:
Hi Guys,
i need some help from people that know what they are doing. I am completly new to trading. Put some money on spread trading but soon lost. I was looking on the net the other day and come across software called intelli trend 250, it is 5k but i am asured it reads trends and will help me win on the markets. This seems to good to be true, doe anyone else use it???? I have a few books and have booked free seminar with win investing, is there any somftware that will help a beginer???
Any advice would be great..
cheers
Bustergrey
I would concur with the other posters. Do not waste your money on courses/expensive software at this stage. Later when you have more experience you will be in a better position to evaluate courses and software and to determine if you still need them. I am not saying that all courses/software are a waste of time/money, but you need to be able to sort out the wheat from the chaff.
There are plenty of sources of free information, free demo systems from brokers and software supplies, free charting and so on that you can start with. Look at the "stickys" at the top of the first steps forum and other postings in that area for ideas.
Beware of free courses. They will give certainly give you ideas of areas to look at, but very few free courses impart a lot of useful information. That is why they are free - they are in reality sales and marketing exercises to draw you into purchasing the paid courses or educational materials. They sound convincing - indeed they are designed to be inspirational, to wow you and to make you lower your guard. There are of course exceptions - brokers' courses can be instructive.
It's worth buying a few good books - ones often quoted on this site.
It's worth scanning this site, brokers, exchanges (LSE, NYSE, NASDAQ, CBOT) as they often have free educational material.
The best teacher of all is the market itself.
Look at charts, particularly in real-time if possible, to look for patterns, trends, areas of resistance and support. If you have access to level II look at the orders, how these are spread between the various price levels, how quickly they change and whether they are stalling. All these things will give you a feel for the market and particular trading instruments.
Observe, develop your analytical powers and put them into practice to determine the most probable direction of the market. Work out the conditions that must exist for you to enter a trade (think of levels of risk compared to levels of expected gains). More importantly think of the conditions that would exist that would tell you that you have got the analysis wrong and would have to exit.
Read chapters 6 and 7 of Douglas's Trading in the zone - all about thinking in probabilities
That should keep you going for a bit
Charlton