Day trading strategies: the complete guide with all the advanced tactics for stock and options trading strategies. Find here the tools you will need to invest in the forex market
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- Being Greedy
Ditching Correlations
We can define correlations as a relationship where one thing influences the outcome or behavior of another. A positive correlation means that both tend to move in the same direction or exhibit similar behaviors, i.e., when one goes up, the other goes up, too, and vice versa. Correlations abound in the stock market. For example, returns on the stock market are usually negatively correlated with the Federal Reserve’s interest rates, i.e., when the Feds increase interest rates, returns on stock market investments go down and vice versa. Correlations exist across industries in the stock market, too. For example, property development stocks are positively correlated to steel and cement manufacturing stocks. This is because when the property development’s booming, it buys more steel and cement from manufacturing companies, which in turn also increase their income. Ignoring correlations during day trading increase your risks for erroneous position taking and exiting. You may take a short position on a steel manufacturer’s stock while taking a long position on a property development company’s stock and if they have a positive correlation, one of those two positions will most likely end up in a loss. But caution must be exercised with using correlations in your day trades. Don’t establish correlations where there’s none. Your job is to simply identify if there are observable correlations, what those correlations are, and how strong they are. Being Greedy Remember the story of the goose that lay golden eggs? Because the goose’s owner was so greedy and couldn’t wait for the goose to lay more eggs immediately, he killed the goose and cut it open. Sadly for the owner, there were no golden eggs inside the goose because it only created and laid one golden egg every day. His greed caused him to destroy his only wealth-generating asset. When it comes to day trading, greed can have the same negative financial impact. Greed can make a day trader hold on to an already profitable position longer than needed and result in smaller profits later on or worse, trading losses. If you remember my story, that was greed in action. Had I been content with the very good returns I already had and closed my position, my paper gains could’ve become actual gains. I let my greed control my trading and chose to hold on to that stock much longer than I needed to. That trade turned into a losing one eventually. That’s why you must be disciplined enough to stick to your day trading stop-loss and profit-taking limits. And that’s why you should program those limits on your platform, too. Doing so minimizes the risks of greed hijacking your otherwise profitable day trades. |
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