10 rules of successful trading

Unlike investors who need markets to move up in order to profit from their
investment, traders don't depend only on bull markets. They can profit even
in down trends.

This is a crucial advantage traders enjoy over investors -- the ability to
make money whether the market is moving up or down. This fact should not,
however, lead you to believe that trading is easy; it requires both a
skill-set and rigorous discipline.

Many people take to trading in the mistaken belief that it is the simplest
way of making money. Far from it, I believe it is the easiest way of losing
money. There is an old Wall Street adage, that 'the easiest way of making a
small fortune in the markets is having a large fortune'.

This game is by no means for the faint hearted. And, this battle is not won
or lost during trading hours but before the markets open but through a
disciplined approach to trading.

*1. Always have a trading plan*

Winning traders diligently maintain charts and keep aside some hours for
market analysis. Every evening a winning trader updates his notebook and
writes his strategy for the next day. Winning traders have a sense of the
market's main trend. They identify the strongest sectors of the market and
then the strongest stocks in those sectors. They know the level they are
going to enter at and approximate targets for the anticipated move.

For example, I am willing to hold till the market is acting right. Once the
market is unable to hold certain levels and breaks crucial supports, I book
profits. Again, this depends on the type of market I am dealing with.

In a strong up trend, I want the market to throw me out of a profitable
trade.

In a mild up trend, I am a little more cautious and try to book profits at
the first sign of weakness.

In a choppy market, not only do I trade the lightest, I book profits while
the market is still moving in my direction.

Good technical traders do not worry or debate about the news flow; they go
by what the market is doing.

*2. Avoid overtrading*

Overtrading is the single biggest malaise of most traders. A disciplined
trader is always ready to trade light when the market turns choppy and even
not trade if there are no trades on the horizon.

For example, I trade full steam only when I see a trending market and reduce
my trading stakes when I am not confident of the expected move. I reduce my
trade even more if the market is stuck in a choppy mode with very small
swings.

A disciplined trader knows when to build positions and step on the gas and
when to trade light and he can only make this assessment after he is clear
about his analysis of the market and has a trading plan at the beginning of
every trading day.

*3. Don't get unnerved by losses*

A winning trader is always cautious; he knows each trade is just another
trade, so he always uses money management techniques. He never over
leverages and always has set-ups and rules which he follows religiously.

He takes losses in his stride and tries to understand why the market moved
against him. Often you get important trading lessons from your losses.

*4. Try to capture the large market moves*

Novice traders often book profits too quickly because they want to enjoy the
winning feeling. Sometimes even on the media one hears things like, "You
never lose your shirt booking profits." I believe novice traders actually
lose their account equity quickly because they do not book their losses
quickly enough.

Knowledgeable traders on the other hand, will also lose their trading equity
 --  though slowly  --  if they are satisfied in booking small profits all
the time. By doing that the only person who can grow rich is your broker.
And this does happen because, inevitably, you will have periods of drawdowns
when you are not in sync with the market. You can never cover a 15-20%
drawdown if you keep booking small profits. The best you will do is be at
breakeven at the end of the day, which is not the goal of successful
trading.

A trading account that is not growing is not sustainable. Thus when you
believe you have entered into a large move, you need to ride it out till the
market stops acting right. Traders with a lot of knowledge of technical
analysis, but little experience, often get into the quagmire of following
very small targets, believing the market to be overbought at every small
rise  --  and uniformly so in all markets.

Such traders are unable to make money because they are too smart for their
own good. They forget to see the phase of the market. Not only do these
traders book profits early, sometimes they even take short positions
believing that a correction is "due". Markets do not generally correct when
corrections are "due".

The best policy is to use a trailing stop loss and let the market run when
it wants to run. The disciplined trader understands this and keeps stop
losses wide enough so that he is balanced between staying in the move as
well as protecting his equity. Capturing a few large moves every year is
what really makes worthwhile trading profits.

*5. Always keeps learning*

You cannot learn trading in a day or even a few weeks, sometimes not even in
months. Successful traders keep reading all the new research on technical
analysis they can get their hands on. They also read a number of books every
month about techniques, about trading psychology and about other successful
traders and how they manage their accounts.

I often like to think about traders as jihadis; unless there is a fire in
the belly, unless there is a strong will and commitment to win, it is
impossible to win consistently in the market.

*6. Always be alert to opportunities of making some money with less risky
strategies as well*

Futures trading, for example, is a very risky business. The best of
chartists and the best of traders sometimes fail. Sure, it gives the highest
returns but these may not be consistent  --  and the drawdowns can be large.


Traders should always remember that no matter how good your analysis is,
sometimes the market is not willing to oblige. In such times the 4-5% that
can be earned in covered calls or futures and cash arbitrage comes in very
handy. It improves the long term sustainability of a trader and keeps your
profit register ringing.

Traders must learn to live with lower risk and lower return at certain times
in the market, in order to protect and enlarge their capital.

Disciplined traders have reasonable risk and return expectations and are
open to using less risky and less exciting strategies of making money, which
helps them tide over rough periods in the markets.

*7. Treat trading as a business and keep a positive attitude*

Trading can be an expensive adventure sport. It should be treated as a
business and should be very profit oriented. Successful traders review their
performance at regular intervals and try to identify causes of both superior
and inferior performance.

The focus should be on consistent profits rather than erratic large profits
and losses. Also, trading performance should not be made a judgement on an
individual; rather, it should be considered a consequence of right or wrong
actions.

Disciplined traders are able to identify when they are out of sync with the
market and need to reduce position size, or keep away altogether. Successful
trading is like dancing in rhythm with the market.

Unsuccessful traders often cut down on all other expenses but refuse to see
what might be wrong with their trading methods. Denial is a costly attitude
in trading. If you see that a particular trade is not working the way you
had expected, reduce or eliminate your positions and see what is going on.

Most disciplined and successful traders are very humble. Humility is a
virtue that traders should learn on their own, else the market makes sure
that they do. Ego and an "I can do no wrong" attitude in good times can lead
to severe drawdowns in the long term.

Also, bad days in trading should be accepted as cheerfully as the good ones.
So disciplined traders maintain composure whether they have made a profit or
not on a particular day and avoid mood swings.

A good way to do this is to also participate in activities other than
trading and let the mind rest so that it is fresh for the next trading day.

*8. Never blame the market for your reverses*

Disciplined traders do not blame the market, the government, the companies
or anyone else, conveniently excluding themselves, for their losses. The
market gives ample opportunities to traders to make money. It is only the
trader's fault if he fails to recognise them.

Also, the market has various phases. It is overbought sometimes and oversold
at other times. It is trending some of the time and choppy at others. It is
for a trader to take maximum advantage of favourable market conditions and
keep away from unfavourable ones.

With the help of derivatives, it is now possible to make some money in all
kinds of markets. So the trader needs to look for opportunities all the
time.

To my mind, the important keys to making long term money in trading are:

Keeping losses small. Remember all losses start small.

   - Ride as many big moves as possible.
   - Avoid overtrading.
   - Never try to impose your will on the market.
   - It is impossible to practice all of the above perfectly. However, if
   you can practice all of the above with some degree of success, improvement
   in trading performance can be dramatic.

*9. Keep a cushion*

If new traders are lucky to come into a market during a roaring bull phase,
they sometimes think that the market is the best place to put all one's
money. But successful and seasoned traders know that if the market starts
acting differently in the future, which it surely will, profits will stop
pouring in and there might even be periods of losses.

So do not commit more than a certain amount to the market at any given point
of time. Take profits from your broker whenever you have them in your
trading account and stow them away in a separate account.

I say this because the market is like a deep and big well. No matter how
much money you put in it, it can all vanish. So by having an account where
you accumulate profits during good times, it helps you when markets turn
unfavourable.

This also makes drawdowns less stressful as you have the cushion of
previously earned profits. Trading is about walking a tightrope most times.
Make sure you have enough cushion if you fall.

*10. Understand that there is no holy grail in the market*

There is no magical key to the Indian or any other stock market. If there
were, investment banks that spend billions of dollars on research would snap
it up. Investing software and trading books by themselves can't make you
enormously wealthy.

They can only give you tools and skills that you can learn to apply. And,
finally, there is no free lunch; every trading penny has to be earned. I
would recommend that each trader identify his own style, his own patterns,
his own horizon and the set-ups that he is most comfortable with and
practice them to perfection.

You need only to be able to trade very few patterns to make consistent
profits in the market.

No gizmos can make a difference to your trading. There are no signals that
are always 100% correct, so stop looking for them.

Focus, instead, on percentage trades, trying to catch large moves and
keeping your methodology simple. What needs constant improving are
discipline and your trading psychology.
At end of the day, money is not made by how complicated-looking your
analysis is but whether it gets you in the right trade at the right time.
Over-analysis can, in fact, lead to paralysis and that is death for a
trader. If you can't pull the trigger at the right time, then all your
analysis and knowledge is a waste.

B.Karthick
Research Analyst.

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