Getting Started The Top 10 Mistakes Traders Make and How To Avoid Them

Achieving success in trading requires avoiding numerous pitfalls as much, or more, than it does seeking out and executing winning trades. In fact, most professional traders will tell you that it's not any specific trading methodologies that make traders successful, but instead it's the overall rules to which those traders strictly adhere that keep them "in the game" long enough to achieve success. Following are 10 of the more prevalent mistakes traders make.

This list is in no particular order of importance.

1. Failure to have a trading plan in place before a trade is executed.
A trader with no specific plan of action in place upon entry into a trade does not know, among other things, when or where he or she will exit the trade, or about how much money may be made or lost. Traders with no pre-determined trading plan are flying by the seat of their pants, and that's usually a recipe for a "crash and burn."

2. Inadequate trading assets or improper money management.
It does not take a fortune to trade the markets with success. Traders with less than $5,000 in their trading accounts can and do trade futures successfully. And, traders with $50,000 or more in their trading accounts can and do lose it all in a heartbeat. Part of trading success boils down to proper money management and not gunning for those highly risky "home-run" type trades that involve too much trading capital at one time.

3. Expectations that are too high, too soon.
Beginning futures traders that expect to quit their "day job" and make a good living trading in their first few years of trading are usually disappointed. You don't become a successful doctor or lawyer or business owner in the first couple years of the practice. It takes hard work and perseverance to achieve success in any field of endeavor -- and trading is no different. Trading is not the easy, "get-rich-quick" scheme that a few unsavory characters make it out to be.

4. Failure to use protective stops.
Using protective buy stops or sell stops upon entering a trade provide a trader with a good idea of about how much money he or she is risking on that particular trade, should it turn out to be a loser. Protective stops are a good money-management tool, but are not perfect. There are no perfect money-management tools in trading.

5. Lack of "patience" and "discipline."
While these two virtues are over-worked and very often mentioned when determining what unsuccessful traders lack, not many will argue with their merits. Indeed. Don't trade just for the sake of trading or just because you haven't traded for a while. Let those very good trading "set-ups" come to you, and then act upon them in a prudent way. The market will do what the market wants to do -- and nobody can force the market's hand.

6. Trading against the trend--or trying to pick tops and bottoms in markets.
It's human nature to want to buy low and sell high (or sell high and buy low for short-side traders). Unfortunately, that's not at all a proven means of making profits in futures trading. Top pickers and bottom-pickers usually are trading against the trend, which is a major mistake.

7. Letting losing positions ride too long.
Most successful traders will not sit on a losing position very long at all. They'll set a tight protective stop, and if it's hit they'll take their losses (usually minimal) and then move on to the next potential trading set up. Traders who sit on a losing trade, "hoping" that the market will soon turn around in their favor, are usually doomed.

8. "Over-trading."
Trading too many markets at one time is a mistake -- especially if you are racking up losses. If trading losses are piling up, it's time to cut back on trading, even though there is the temptation to make more trades to recover the recently lost trading assets. It takes keen focus and concentration to be a successful trader. Having "too many irons in the fire" at one time is a mistake.

9. Failure to accept complete responsibility for your own actions.
When you have a losing trade or are in a losing streak, don't blame your broker or someone else. You are the one who is responsible for your own success or failure in trading. You make the trading decisions. If you feel you are not in firm control of your own trading, then why do you feel that way? You should make immediate changes that put you in firm control of your own trading destiny.

10. Not getting a bigger-picture perspective on a market.
One can look at a daily bar chart and get a shorter-term perspective on a market trend. But a look at the longer-term weekly or monthly chart for that same market can reveal a completely different perspective. It is prudent to examine longer-term charts, for that bigger-picture perspective, when contemplating a trade.
 
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In his Rule #7, he says successful traders use tight stops. I trade forex and that is one of the surest ways to lose your money.

Rule #8 talks about overtrading. This is one thing everybody gets completely wrong. If you have an edge, you will make a lot more money trading 1000 times a year than a 100 times. It is simple and basic maths.

The point about averaging down is wrong headed. It depends why and how you average down. Imagine a situation where you think EURUSD will go up but you are not, naturally, sure exactly from where. Let's says it is now at 1.2080. You think it will go up but you also think there is a good chance it will go to 1.2050 first. If you were planning to risk 2% of your 50k account or 1000, you can average down without increasing the amount you risk. There is little point in believing that you will get your entries exactly right. So, why is averaging down such a sin?

What will be very stupid is to enter a trade with full size and then add to it as it goes against you. However, if you keep your risk the same, it is a very itelligent way of trading. It will give you room to have a wider stop from your original point.

1-So, for example, you can easily add 20 pips to your stop loss without increaing your risk!! If you decide to leave your stop the same amount as if you bought everything at one point, you will lose much less.

2- You will start being profitable on the later entries very quickly and you will find yourself in a position to scale out profitably if you wish

3- If the price takes off from your first or second entry, you will at least have a small position in place rather than missing the trade waiting "paitently".

I have been at this business for a while and one thing I advice people to avoid is following this prepackaged and hackneyed rules. They make you rigid and unimaginative.
 
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