bran987
New member
I've probably just done as much if not more research on the stock market as I have real estate. I've been reading books and following it since I was 16, almost 25 now.
This is the only time I'll write this because I firmly believe it's something you have to learn on your own, but this is what I've learned.
YOU ARE NOT WARREN BUFFETT JUST BECAUSE YOU READ ONE OF HIS BOOKS
Same goes for Peter Lynch, George Soros, Ben Graham, or my personal favorite, Jesse Livermore!
Here is one thing 99% of people who think they will trade stocks don't know, that the pros do.
You should in almost all cases never risk (bet) more than 1% of your portfolio on any one trade. i.e. $1,000 out of $100,000. This is called Position Sizing.
If you risk 2% or more on one trade, you are what the pros call a GUNSLINGER. Why? Because over the long run, if you proceed to trade this way, you will lose all of your money!!
Did you think about that last time you decided to invest $2,500 out of your $10,000 because a stock "looked like it was about to go up from the news and the chart and the research I did"
I'm not making this up, it has been proven over and over and over and over again.
Hundreds of thousands of people before you have thought they were going to do this.
I just have to be firm because we are smart people and we tend to think we will be different.
YOU ARE NOT A UNIQUE AND BEAUTIFUL SNOWFLAKE.
There is a lifetime of knowledge to learn, and all I know is that I learned enough to decide there are MUCH easier ways to earn a living.
Do you know what you will do if one of your trades is down 25%? Or 50%? Or up that much? I do, because you are human. You have your natural psychology working against you. But you don't know yourself very well until you've been there, and even then you won't even know why you are behaving the way you are until you study up.
I will give you one lesson on Position Sizing so you can see it illustrated.
Let's say the system you've devised (which you have paper traded for at least 6 months and still has a positive expectancy) tells you it's time to put a trade on. Your system says Buy MSFT at $25.
Your system also tells you that if you are wrong, you in this case are willing to lose $3 per share before you will close the position at a loss.
You have $100,000 in your account and you are going to risk 1% of your equity on this trade, ($1,000)
$1,000 / $3 (max loss per share) = 333 shares.
Buy 333 shares of MSFT at $25, total of $8,325.
If MSFT goes down to $22, (your max loss allowed) you will have lost $1,000 and your stop loss order should trigger, selling the 333 shares for $22 per share, leaving you with $7,325, ($1000 less than you started with).
your worst case scenario still left you with 99% of your equity.
There should also be in your system, a strategy to follow if the stock goes up 25% (i.e. do you buy more? or sell some?) and it should ALL be tested in paper trading before you risk your real money. There are lots of ways to devise systems, but you have to learn the ropes.
This is the most basic lesson you can learn. I can't stress to you enough if you go in to the market on hunches, gunslinging or trying to read a company's financial statements and think you are getting "a good deal" in the long run, you will lose all of your money. You might even last 5 years, but the stock market, like all businesses is the same. If you Fail to Plan you are Planning to Fail.
This is my warning, but I know many of you will think it doesn't apply to you. Like I said, the stock market is very exciting.
Best wishes to all!
P.S. Read Market Wizards : Interviews with Top Traders
by Jack D. Schwager
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...102-2539339-8540110?v=glance&s=books&n=507846
This is the only time I'll write this because I firmly believe it's something you have to learn on your own, but this is what I've learned.
YOU ARE NOT WARREN BUFFETT JUST BECAUSE YOU READ ONE OF HIS BOOKS
Same goes for Peter Lynch, George Soros, Ben Graham, or my personal favorite, Jesse Livermore!
Here is one thing 99% of people who think they will trade stocks don't know, that the pros do.
You should in almost all cases never risk (bet) more than 1% of your portfolio on any one trade. i.e. $1,000 out of $100,000. This is called Position Sizing.
If you risk 2% or more on one trade, you are what the pros call a GUNSLINGER. Why? Because over the long run, if you proceed to trade this way, you will lose all of your money!!
Did you think about that last time you decided to invest $2,500 out of your $10,000 because a stock "looked like it was about to go up from the news and the chart and the research I did"
I'm not making this up, it has been proven over and over and over and over again.
Hundreds of thousands of people before you have thought they were going to do this.
I just have to be firm because we are smart people and we tend to think we will be different.
YOU ARE NOT A UNIQUE AND BEAUTIFUL SNOWFLAKE.
There is a lifetime of knowledge to learn, and all I know is that I learned enough to decide there are MUCH easier ways to earn a living.
Do you know what you will do if one of your trades is down 25%? Or 50%? Or up that much? I do, because you are human. You have your natural psychology working against you. But you don't know yourself very well until you've been there, and even then you won't even know why you are behaving the way you are until you study up.
I will give you one lesson on Position Sizing so you can see it illustrated.
Let's say the system you've devised (which you have paper traded for at least 6 months and still has a positive expectancy) tells you it's time to put a trade on. Your system says Buy MSFT at $25.
Your system also tells you that if you are wrong, you in this case are willing to lose $3 per share before you will close the position at a loss.
You have $100,000 in your account and you are going to risk 1% of your equity on this trade, ($1,000)
$1,000 / $3 (max loss per share) = 333 shares.
Buy 333 shares of MSFT at $25, total of $8,325.
If MSFT goes down to $22, (your max loss allowed) you will have lost $1,000 and your stop loss order should trigger, selling the 333 shares for $22 per share, leaving you with $7,325, ($1000 less than you started with).
your worst case scenario still left you with 99% of your equity.
There should also be in your system, a strategy to follow if the stock goes up 25% (i.e. do you buy more? or sell some?) and it should ALL be tested in paper trading before you risk your real money. There are lots of ways to devise systems, but you have to learn the ropes.
This is the most basic lesson you can learn. I can't stress to you enough if you go in to the market on hunches, gunslinging or trying to read a company's financial statements and think you are getting "a good deal" in the long run, you will lose all of your money. You might even last 5 years, but the stock market, like all businesses is the same. If you Fail to Plan you are Planning to Fail.
This is my warning, but I know many of you will think it doesn't apply to you. Like I said, the stock market is very exciting.
Best wishes to all!
P.S. Read Market Wizards : Interviews with Top Traders
by Jack D. Schwager
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...102-2539339-8540110?v=glance&s=books&n=507846