Long Term Secrets To Short-Term Trading
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long term secrets to short term trading larry williams book novel
"proving" their mumbo-jumbo works. I have been on the speaking circuit with these folks as well, and
have come to have little respect for this crowd, with some exceptions. Of the thousands of traders applying this cosmic logic, I have only seen two do well, Arch Crawford and Jerry Favors. Two out of thousands is not a great batting average. In addition, Arch and Jerry are not only exceptionally smart people, but well-trained, experienced traders who use more than just one approach. The bottom line problem with the "all can be known" thesis is that it causes you to throw away fear, to place your convictions, and money, on a thesis, not what is actually going on in the market. If your focus is the market, what is happening now, and not a belief that stock or commodity prices must do something, your chances for success will skyrocket: A perfect system or approach does not exist. Never has, never will. If there were such a thing as perfection in this business, then that would mean (1) the markets contain no random inputs and (2) someone else would have already found the magical solution and own most of the free world by now. Since we know the markets do have a high degree of random influence from ever-changing news, weather, traders' outlooks, and that even the best traders and funds tap out, we must realize that the markets are not to be traded with a 100 percent mechanical approach. Things change. Does this sound strange coming from someone who has just about spent his entire adult life developing systematic approaches to trading', Probably so, and it should not be taken to mean all my work, or systems and such, don't work: Life is a judgment call, but that call is based on having data and systems to make life work better. So it is with trading. I need a systematic ap proacb to get me into and out of trades, I need absolute stops, and I sure as beck need precise entry rules. But above all, I need to use some judgment of when to use this "stuff." Let's look at an example from real life. If you are driving down the road and a truck is dead ahead of you in your lane, do you stay in that lane or swerve across to the empty lane where you are not supposed to be? The rules are clear, you are not 248 supposed to be over there. The system says don't do it, but reality is an 18-wheeler coming toward you in your lane. Do we follow all the rules of safe driving, or do we adapt to the situation at hand? Survival is a function of adaptation. Reality rules. On the road, in the markets: The first rule of life is to survive; the second rule is that all rules can be broken if that supports the first rule. Speculation follows the same rules we use for life; they are integrally the same. Successful trading is the art of using knowledge (systems) at the right time. This means when it is time to use the system or rule, you check for an oncoming 18-wheeler. That is what thinking is all about. We do need systems of living and systems for trading. But it is not mandatory that you follow all systems exactly all the time. The reason is that systems do not adapt to any new bits of reality. That is what our mind is for, to observe, to record, to note changes, and then to develop an optimum use of the system. If you do not know what to do as you are trading, you must follow the rules because they will keep you alive. If you like market conditions and they fit what your rules suggest, go for it; if the rules don't fit conditions or conditions don't fit the rules . . . pass. You don't have to trade every day. The object of having systems and rules is to run them to your best advantage, and not to let them run you. I wish you well, I wish you good luck and good trading, and most of all I remind you to remember those three little words: Always use stops. Index A Brie, Doug, 58 British Pound, 84 Accuracy, 199 Bullish markets, 70, 77-78 Active traders, 73 Bullish patterns, 95-96, 98, 101 Adams, Richard, 108 Buy setup, smash day, 101 Adaptation, 247-248 Buy signals, 109, 115-117 Advisory services, 205 Buy swing, 12 3 Aggressive trading, 2, 170 Amateur traders, 2 13 Athletics analogy, 209 c Average profit per trade, 60 Casinos, 166-167, 172. See also Gambling: Games of chance B Castell, Albury, 234 Chalek, Mike, 1 Babcock, Bruce, 114 Channel breakouts, 235 Bad habits, 237-240 Chaos, 12. 19 Balance, in price and time swings, 47-55 Charting, generally', 11-13, 19. 43,, 60 Bar charts, 11, 13 1. See also specific types of Chartists, 12-13, 15, 93 trades Chase, Henry- Wheeler. 16 Bearish markets, 3 7, 70, 72, 77 Clinton, Hillary, 227 Bearish trades, 246 Close, holding strategies and, Behavior of Prices on Wall Street, The Close-to-close relationship, 85 Merrill 120 Closing, hiigh/low. 39 Belief system, 4-5, 202-203,228 Commoditiy Futures Trading Coinmision Bernstein, jake, 77, 114 (CFTC), 1 Bias, trading on, 85-88 Commodity- Research Bureau. 208 Bond market Commodity Timing-, daily range breakouts, 61 Commodiity Timing articles: long-range days, 34-35 Art of Fly--Fishing Revisited. The. 193 Oops' pattern, 116-117, 120 Athletics Are Such a Parallel to Trading patterns, 97-99 209 stock prices and, 72 Beating Them to the Punch. 2 18-22 1 Bottoms, 37-39, 55, 133 Boston Marathon. 1996. 191 Breakouts: Broken Nose, Cauliflower Ears. and Bad smash day patterns, 105 Trades, 2 2 3 specialists' trap, 109 Difference Between Winners and volatility (see Volatility breakouts) Losers. 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