10 free trading tipsTip 1- Use statistics to avoid bad setups, and enter and exit at high probability areas
Example: Wanting to join an early trend on a pullback? It probably is a bad idea to enter before 50% retrace.
Elliott rules even say wave 2 typically retraces to 78.6%, so it's probably a good idea to wait for a big retrace before going in.
Of course, and this could be another tip of itself, Elliott never made money investing, so it's best to learn from the charts than him.
Tip 2- Use the daily chart, or more precisely the 6 months to 5 years chart
By studying the charts one quickly learns that price evolves on the "daily chart". By this I don't mean the candles absolutely have to be 1 candle = 1 day, as long as depending on several factors 6 months to 5 years of price data are visible. Typically I go for about 2 years, and clicking on "D" is what looks best. Plus humans are on a 24 hour cycle, so daily candles just makes sense. Some people can't stand noise and just look at moving averages.
Tip 3- It is probably a good idea to not try to join very extended trends on a pullback
When an extended trend finally has a pullback, it's often going to be a big one.
We all heard over and over some numbers such as "1.618". If 90% (totally arbitrary number) of EURUSD trends that make it to 2.618 and pullback end up reversing, and only 1% make it really far, you sure you can get a 1 to 100 risk to reward? Some areas might be best to avoid.
In all competitions champions find all the tricks to make it as easy as possible. That's how one becomes the best.
Not by being a complete idiot that goes straight ahead tries to brute force.
"I die, yes, but with honor!". No no, no honor, you die like an idiot the enemy is laughing at you, and your village will get raped and burned to the ground. People love to be hipsters. I prefer to win, to crush the competition.
Tip 4- You already heard this: Cut losses, hold winners, be disciplined
Are bagholders hipsters, or just weak? Clearly all the "diamond hands" are simply weak cowards that piss themselves at the idea of taking a loss.
I do not want to waste too much time on this one, a very easy way to gain a huge advantage over the competition.
Just careful beginners with huge rewards and tiny stops. Greedy stops won't lead to great profits, but to death by a thousand cuts.
Tip 5- Do not daytrade, day trading is stupid
Ah the day gambling hipsters. "I'll be the one in a hundred that makes it". Even roulette and sports betting have better odds.
And the 1 in 100 that make it, assuming it's not just luck, make PEANUTS. They'd earn more flipping burgers.
As I explained, price action is based on the "daily" chart. Trends last months, they can be divided in smaller moves that last days to weeks.
And the price, as I also explained, reacts around these daily chart swings, and daily chart extensions. Another reason why daygambling is so troll.
And since day gamblers "close at the end of the day" (vomit) you could be right and lose money! You could be wrong and lose money!
So even if they have some edge, they add enormous randomness (and ruin an edge) because there is a time factor we have no control on, they'll close before bed at a completely random price, just because "the day is over". Same concept as the binary option scam that got banned. That's literally gambling!
Oh and when they "close at the end of the day" 🤢 they will be making even less than 15 pips, with spreads still the same size.
Tip 6- For the noobs: Start with something simple that works and conditions will be added over years
I think the best course of action would be to go for the basics, something that is expected to work, going with the trend, not focussing too much on the entry, having a reward better than the risk but not too tight (greedy). And with time improve it.
It's like making muscle. If you stop trying to be a hipster and just do what you are been told (don't daytrade, don't hold losers, don't go against the trend), after the initial learning curve (1-5 years, sorry for the dreamers/gamblers) on year 1 you gain 7.5 kg muscle (7.5% returns), year 2 5 kg muscle, year 3-5 5 kg muscle, year 6-20 maintain, maybe small additional gains. Guys like Bill Hwang have shown someone could be a self-made billionaire making 60% a year, so these numbers are just illustrative. The idea is traders develop over time. All the famous ones really got good after several years, and peaked decades after they started. There are no steroids in trading. Ok I guess there are, those would be insider trading, but this isn't easy to access, and a crime.
Tip 7- Noobs again: use indicators if you want too, but don't waste time trying to look for indicator edges
If you think indicators look good then use them, but don't waste too much time looking for an edge. We'd know if there was one.
Don't be lazy, when starting one probably should spend a little bit of time backtesting indicators, and quickly will find out there is nothing of value, no edge based on the indicator itself. And then they can look for something else with a clear head, without wondering "did I miss something".
Tip 8- Beginners or intermediate traders that are not yet profitable: Don't aim for huge asymmetric risk to reward
You look at charts, there is volatility, in the real or original sense of the word. Trends have plenty of pullbacks, 23.6%, 38.6%, 50%.
You might have noticed those were quite significant pullbacks. Not tiny 5-10% pullbacks. So how does a risk to reward of 1 to 20 or 1 to 10 make sense?
And how is someone not yet experienced, not even profitable, going to pinpoint exact high and top? I know NO ONE that can be that precise.
When George Soros broke the bank of England, he sold at the upper end, and had a large risk to reward. Correct me if I am wrong but he sold for 10 billion, made 1 billion, and said his risk was below 2% (200 million). That was the trade of a lifetime and his reward was 5 times his risk "only".
I think he said his hit rate was below 30%. I doubt he typically takes trades with a risk to reward of 20. Or ever.
Maybe there is an edge out there, with 100 RR, who knows? But I think it is more reasonable to start with something between 1.5 and 3.
Tip 9- Strong trends are the best, pretty obvious but people seem to avoid these
On strong trends retail positions are massively on the wrong side, some sources show the percentage of positions and some show more.
The very few traders that are in the correct side have tiny gains, out of hundreds of thousands of accounts the people going in the correct direction and holding can be counted with 1 hand. Makes me feel very special. 1 in a thousand. Even 1 in 10,000.
It's really simple too.
I was tired of try harding 2 years ago, and I just yolo'd in trends, and it worked out. And last year I repeated it, and it worked again! So I focussed on that, and added a strategy to my arsenal. I call it "breakout" but there's really 2 strategies and one of them is not a breakout at all. I wish I started with this, because it is a real goldmine. Not just the easiest, but most productive too. And I'd build the other strats later. When I started I quickly noticed big patterns that flashed in my eyes, once you see them you cannot unsee them, so I went in that direction, obviously.
If you're onto something do not spit in the soup! But if you have a choice, let's call it that, I encourage everyone to aim in the direction of trend following! It's well worth it. If you want to make money. For those that would rather be hipsters, well, have fun.
Tip 10- Breakouts! Strong trend breakouts! Be patient
And final tip, with breakouts in strong trend, they very very often don't go anywhere. Best way to lose money is to fomo.
I'd rather miss out.
So the trick is to have a condition like this: "It has to go far enough."
Or it can go like this: "I want the price to remain above the previous high", that's not realistic, so it could be "I want 2/3 of the price to be above the previous high, and then to double bottom with the high of the bounce above the previous high", which is more reasonable.
This is all just my personal opinion, I do not offer refunds. And it is all specific to Forex.
Do you own research. With the charts. All praise the charts. Glory to the charts.
Skill
Make sure to focus on improving in every aspectNote I am using GBPJPY, a favorite of high leverage day gamblers as it has the biggest range of the 30 leverage pairs.
I am not "spreading FUD", if day gamblers want to lose their money I do not care. Actually I like it.
Finding success is satisfying but additionally watching others fail has an added sweetness that is irresistible.
This is simply a reminder to be logical, and since we try to always better ourselves we have to make sure to better ourselves on all aspects.
It sounds simple like this but I assure you it is simple when you are told it, like hindsight.
People think they are supermen that think of everything, never miss anything, and are going to buy at bottoms and sell at tops.
Well to people that think that: good for you. I am no superman. And believe me I'm not being humble I hold myself to high standards and have a big pride.
Warren Buffett is no superman either. Neither is George Soros. Nor Jim Simons, he made real money decades after buying his first future contract and needed to hire someone to help him out with stocks which he did not know that well.
You may ask "But MrRenev how do I improve on myself and my trading? I do not even know where to start, I do not even know what to improve in".
Well you force yourself to have a rational organised mind, write it down; and you take your chart screen, sit in front of it, and stay there for the next 50 years.
==> Read, read, read. Watch videos, read articles like this one or (I'm not sure if I can mention potential competitors), go on forums, read books if you want.
I would call this part the "fun" part, or the leisure part. Watch videos you find interesting, even read memeposts on the internet, as long as you can tell what is bs what is not, even absolute trash will teach you how others think or will make you think or will show you others mistakes.
==> The second part, the laborious one (it's okay when you get into it you won't see the hours). You open excel, you open tradingview, you get a tool to save screenshots automatically, you open the calculator, you open a CME window, you open notepad/sublimetext. And you grind. You take in vast amounts of data, process it, look at the stats, and you learn. You ask questions such as "what are other participants doing? What are their holding periods" and so on.
So here is the secret holy grail:
R.D. Wyckoff started as a stock runner for a New York brokerage at 15 years old. He started speculating at least 10 years later, after having learned much from the charts and his clients mistakes.
W.D. Gann is the son of a cotton farmer and started hearing and learning about markets at a young age. He then went to a business school (useless) and worked for a broker, like Wyckoff he learned from his clients mistakes and then started proprietary trading.
George Soros started in 1954 as a clerk, then arbitrage trader, in 1959 he was an analyst for euro stocks, until 1963 when he became a VP.
He started a fund in 1966 with his employer money (correct me if I am wrong) to try out his trading strategies - developed during his 12 years in the business.
Don't just "try to make money", improve on everything and it will come with time. Remember, the most toxic tryhards are the best players in sports and video games. Same thing here.
If your goal is not to be "the best I can" and just "make money", McDonald's has job offers available, good luck as a burger flipper, and I'm not sure I'd want to eat those.
The fascinating world of boredom tradesGoing to expose my recent half month history and then talk a bit about boredom trading in general.
Hey, so I guess I'm the typical breakeven trader now.
Usually they say "you'll give all your profits back" at least I am able to breakeven.
I think my timeframe is 2 weeks because I often think in half months like many think in quarters or months or days.
And the second half of July were 2 very active weeks, hahaha I'm pissing myself looking at my journal I took plenty of trades all over the board and kept winning, but they were LITERALLY ALL, EVERY SINGLE ONE, a short on the USDOLLAR.
I had 1 breakeven on copper mid month, then just machine gun shorts on the USD. Could almost call it a single idea or trade.
When I said I kept winning well no I did not I had 50% strike rate but I had big R's. The usd went very far away. The machine gun spree ends with a row of losers as the usd stopped going down.
I gave a few R back which is not a big deal, and then knew to stay away. Very good half month. Hard to get passive after that.
And then I got bored and fomo shorted the usdsek. Not a good place to sell. No valid price action. Nah. Boredom, nothing else, "might continue down might as well sell never know".
Then gold went up again and I chased it on H1 which sounds bad but I have the skill dw about me this is not the problem here. I chained (small) win after win and got good results out of it.
Wheat was not really a boredom trade and I do not regret it. Because I want to learn more about other markets... Or just because I won? XD Can't tell.
And then... I just went nuts and chained the boredom trades 😂. Mainly losses.
Day 1 "Ok if I can just get a few R for the month I'll be happy and won't try to get more. I understand if it is a slow month. I can stop whenever I want."
Day 10 "PLEASE I NEED MORE GIVE ME MY FIX JUST 1 LAST PLEASE"
I hit the roulette wheel in every market because why not? It's obvious it was boredom why would I check agri, AND crypto, AND stocks?
And I just breakeven... Not bad, hey I am not losing money, good start, oh wait not it just means I have no clue and no edge whatsoever, literal coinflip 😂
I want to take a look at those asset classes:
They all suck. Too expensive & noisy, too slow too many gaps, too slow and boring to death.
Why'd I even waste my time?
It is important to analyse those rationally after binge-gambling.
And of course, with my other strat I missed a good one... (I have 2 main strat and then I allow myself to go on instinct a bit see what happens)
Might have spotted it otherwise. I rarely get opportunities on it, shame...
You think you'll "age" out of it, but the addiction just keeps growing. Try to keep busy. Solutions include spending time on backtesting, reviewing the past week month year, reading, going on forums, posting ideas, or just getting a life but let's be real that's not part of the attributes of a profitable trader, I'd call it a requirement, to be autistic anti-social and have no life. You at least have to be able to think differently, outside the box, and the more "weird" you are, the greater your potential. Thinking for one self does not enable one to mix up with the sheep. It's lonely at the top.
In the 1910's Jesse Livermore after losing most of his money being stupid with cotton had so much luck that the markets were the flatest they have ever been (it is visible on the dow jones chart). He lost his money and then even went into debt for 1 million (1910 million!). He had to declare bankrupcy.
If you know a bit about him you know he was always looking for big moves, and when they were there he traded them perfectly and just was a monster. He bought every top and sold every bottom during certain good periods (of several years), he is known for the big 1929 short that got him summoned by the president xd.
How much would he had made with George Soros in 92? And in ~2007?
Easy to get overconfident when doing well, and easy to get addicted and keep taking rando bets "I am so good, no fear".
And when you do not get punished (no money lost) you just continue...
Am I going to continue? Looking at agri choppy & expensive charts, long term stocks, and boring to death crypto, has depressed me so much I think I'm disgusted.
But I probably will continue to play with FX & hard commodities, I learn alot when I do this (and here we go with the dishonest justification).
You need passion to be good, but when you have it, you need to always be active. Check mate.
Let's hope we can all learn from history lessons.
Oh and today there are more markets also, but at the same time everything is so correlated, and either nothing moves or everything moves! Even crypto!
A trick? Maybe being invested in something can be a solution. When markets are slow you'll at least be in something, and have something to think of.
But then you'll start to "adjust" it... Check mate. There is no hope.
Is it this bad?
The last boring year was 2015
I'm not even afraid that what I do won't work but I'm really scare of never getting any entry, just no setup ever.
This wasn't that bad, it was reassuring.
Really best to focus on the cleanest ones. Not sure what people should expect. 50R a year? That's a little under 5 a month.
10/month => 120/yr. All months won't be active, and all years either.
5r month with 0.5% risk means 2.5% per month and 35% per year.
The biggest risk with these dead periods is not to get no setups it's to look too hard for them. And when you have been inactive for a while you don't even know how they really look like you lose practice. Am I seing right? At least on tradingview you can use the replay function to practice a bit.
Imagine checking charts all the time but nothing happens and when you stay away you know what happens.
Another thing people do with boredom is lower the time frame and then look for something. More or less works the same as the rest.
As in it is just as bad, same reasons, same consequences.
There is no magic trick. All I can say is to look at charts, and be aware at best you will breakeven.
It is another skill: to know when to stay away. You just have to manage to deal with it.
If you find yourself losing your mind and yelling "ITS ALL OVER THE MARKETS WILL NEVER MOVE AGAIN I AM DONE" I think it's time to go out, maybe go see a doctor too.
Free money - but not easy money!This educational post shows how exploiting trends can deliver profits in the long term, by living for the big trends. This is a no-targets system that uses the ATR. Trend switches define entry positions and the markets decide exit positions. Scaling-in of position sizes is an advanced higher risk technique. Those lacking experience and with small account sizes should stay far from it.
Trading is not easy. If it was then everybody would be doing it and making millions. About 80 to 90% of all traders consistently lose money. Shocking but true.
Even in showing a purely mathematical system, there are unseen limitations in the backdrop. What's that? The key defining limitation is 'YOU' and your individual psychology. Risk - or the sense of risk - how 'you' manage that, is mostly about psychology.
Even when mathematical reality becomes unarguable, there is still the psychological issue about 'being convinced'. Not everybody is convinced by what is exquisitely mathematical.
Please note that I've only used a 60 min time frame on one chart for illustrative purposes. This is not a tutorial. The skill involved in anticipating where trend switches are more likely to occur is not something I can teach or intend to teach (even for a fee). I do not accept fees and never make any offers of deals to anybody - that's my 'mathematical constant'.
How my strategy could have saved people on a huge short squeezeHey everyone, YoungShkreli here
Every now and again, I reflect on my trades and see if I can pull something from my past that will help you all in the future. So gather around the campfire, have some smores, papa Shkreli is going to tell you all a story.
The date is April 11th 2018. Tomorrow, there will be one of the biggest, if not the biggest, short squeezes in Bitcoin history. Everyone is bearish and just the day before, so was I. I thought that was the move that was going to take us down to $5,000 (I've been waiting to hit this number since December 2017). My feeling was that bitcoin was going to do it, it was going to hit $5,000 and I was going to increase my bitcoin stack by a ton. However, the ashi closed green after a long bear move and a low RSI reading, so instead of shorting like the rest, I went and bought bitcoin (unfortunately, I wasn't wise enough to go 1000000x long). Let's recap, my feelings were telling me to short, but my strategy was telling me to long. Which did I listen to? My STRATEGY.
Guys, this is not an article about how you have to be contrarian (although you should be), this is an article about sticking to the strategy that you know works. I can't stress this enough. A good trader is not someone who can guess where the market is going all the time (no one can, no one is a wizard). A good trader is one who has developed a winning strategy, controls risk, and knows when he is wrong. You can be wrong MOST OF THE TIME and still make a TON of money. Before I adopted my most recent strategy (which is levels above what I have used before and seen here or anywhere), I had the other two things and that was good enough for me. I remember during one bad run of luck, I got 8 TRADES IN A ROW incorrectly. That said, on each one of them, I controlled the loss so that they were all small. When I got to the ninth trade, I was right and I was right big. I was right so big that it cancelled out the previous losing trades by a cool 8%. If you are trading a big account, 8% is a big deal.
SUMMARY:
Trading is not about knowing where the market is going, you can't possibly know that. Trading is about being emotionless and being willing to be wrong, controlling risk, and hopefully always finding ways to make your strategy better.
If you liked this post, please like my work and follow me. It will help both of us: I can only really help people in a big way when I'm on the top trader list - I will sell software, strategies, write more etc. as well as continue to provide free material.
Notice that in addition to selling things for money, I will always provide a TON of free material until I die, why? Because I am only where I am today as the result of other people teaching me things for free. If it weren't for free resources online about bitcoin and trading, I would not have done that well for myself. Trading has changed my entire life because trading bitcoin got me into learning fundamental analysis for stocks, which got me reading finance books, which got me reading any type of book, which taught me skills, which got me into entrepreneurship etc. I don't care about money, I care about being successful and helping people. That is what life is about: taking care of yourself and those who support you.
Stay humble guys, we all stand on the shoulders of giants :')
-YoungShkreli
P.S. I already know what my next educational post is going to be about. I love trading, you guys. hint: it's going to be about code I wrote and Ray Dalio