Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Notes to myself as a beginner

What I wish I could have said to myself as a novice trader...

Amateur day trading is like amateur surgery.
You would never put your well-being in the hands of an amateur untrained surgeon. Would you give your money to an amateur untrained trader to trade for you?
Guess what, you're that untrained trader.

You need an education. You need practice to absorb the education.
(And you're still going to lose money at first.)

Never trade with money you can't afford to lose, and there is a very real chance you could (will?) lose ALL of it.
I say this not just because you really could lose it all (ALL!), but also because if you are scared to lose money you will not trade well. You are going to lose money at first. Everyone pays tuition to the market, so minimize it by getting an education and wading in slowly

If you need to get rich quick, this is not your gig.

Draw from all educational resources: books, YouTube, classes, mentors... Flood yourself with information and ideas. Start to pick out what resonates with you, and pursue more of that. Before buying a course, get an introductory education and try to figure out what style suits you. Trading penny stocks is different from big caps is different from trading options.

An education should include:

Intro to technical analysis. Learning how to read charts
How to read a candlestick chart, including price and volume
Support/resistance
Trends, trendlines, moving averages
Multi-timeframe analysis
Screening
Setups

Intro to trade management. Distinct from technical analysis
Opening an account. Brokers, fees, cash vs margin
Familiarity with your trading platform and tools like screeners
Picking what to trade
Techniques for entering (how/when to place orders)
Techniques for managing the trade (stops, targets, adding/trimming)

Intro to psychology
Developing a style
Understanding your tolerances, greed and fear
Defiining and obeying max loss tolerances
Developing self-discipline
Figuring out what you're good/bad at


Looking back, I realize how much of an education I have acquired at this point. To facilitate learning, especially in the midst of active trading, I can't emphasize enough how important it is to debrief, introspect, analyze, and journal every day. Develop a manageable journaling technique that helps you reveal your weaknesses and hone your skills.

I would tell my novice self to go slower. 
Grow agonizingly slowly, vs through painful losses. Losses are part of trading. Newbie losses can devastate you before you can make it. Trading is not a get rich quickly scheme. It may be a get rich slowly scheme, but not if you go broke quickly.
Protect capital. Use stops. Live to trade another day.

Popular Posts