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Recently I had the less than desirable task of sitting through eight hours of traffic school. I was a good sport about it and was able to get through it without falling asleep from boredom (the instructor made it bearable). As the class progressed, I began to draw parallels between being a safe driver and a profitable trader.

For one, being a safe driver requires following a set of rules (usually imposed by our states or municipalities); in trading however, we create our own set of rules. Similarly, in both activities transgressions carry with them a commensurate penalty.

Can you imagine driving around without stopping at the red lights or stop signs, or not driving in your marked lane? If you did that for any extended period, the likelihood of being involved in an accident, or worse, would be almost certain. In much the same way, a trader who enters the market without a concrete set of rules will eventually experience a collision with the market gods that won’t look pretty. If you think about it, isn’t running a stop sign analogous to a trader that doesn’t use stops. Sure, he can get away with it for a while but it’s only a matter of time until things will end badly in both scenarios.

In my many years in this industry, I have yet to meet a consistently profitable trader that did not have a “golden set of rules”. I believe it is imperative for someone starting out to create a set of trading rules before embarking on their trading journey.

Trading rules should be designed and implemented to minimize losses, maximize profits and give the trader boundaries. They must also be personal. By this, I mean the perimeters set by a trader will have to comply with an individual’s style of trading, temperament for risk, size of account and long term objectives (their motivation for trading). For these reasons, it is important that when you begin to formulate your rules you have a trading philosophy as well as having done some serious introspection.

Risk management is the cornerstone of any professional’s trading plan. Therefore, the first rule for any trader should be one that addresses how much money is permissible to lose on each trade based on the account size and trader’s comfort level. In a futures account, this should not exceed more than 2% of the equity (account balance). In addition, a daily loss limit and restricted number of trades per day should also be complied with. Limiting the number of trades per day will make a trader more discerning in the trades he or she will take. The natural tendency for new traders is to trade frequently. However, more trades means less quality.

One of my personal trading rules is never to allow a big winner to turn into a loser. I define a big winner when a profit is three times the initial risk. This rule is helpful in managing risk but also helps keeping capital preservation in the forefront of a trader’s consciousness.

In order to maintain favorable odds and shift the focus away from being right most of the time, perhaps another rule might focus on trading only with favorable risk-to-reward ratios (preferable 1-to-3 or more).

It’s also important to know when not to trade. There isn’t a trader I know that has ever lost money by waiting. Other trading rules might speak to trading environments, times of the day, etc. For example, if your trading style is trend following perhaps you avoid range-bound markets. Conversely, if you trade using oscillators, sideways patterns may work for you. Maybe you don’t trade the first fifteen minutes, or extended hours and so on. Whatever your style, you must always understand the levels where supply and demand is out of balance in order to find high quality opportunities.

Indeed, crafting your individual rule-set is the easier part of a trading plan; CONSISTENT implementation, however, is the challenge. Still, adherence to the trading rules must be the focal point, not making money. Traders who undergo protracted draw-downs are usually those who have veered away from following their rules, or even worse, those that don’t have any RULES.

In summary, having a plan and a set of rules is important, however, execution is the critical component in extracting money from any market on a regular basis. Just like consistently following the rules of the road will make you a safer driver.

Until next time, I hope everyone has a great week.

Learn to Trade Now


This content is intended to provide educational information only. This information should not be construed as individual or customized legal, tax, financial or investment services. As each individual's situation is unique, a qualified professional should be consulted before making legal, tax, financial and investment decisions. The educational information provided in this article does not comprise any course or a part of any course that may be used as an educational credit for any certification purpose and will not prepare any User to be accredited for any licenses in any industry and will not prepare any User to get a job. Reproduced by permission from OTAcademy.com click here for Terms of Use: https://www.otacademy.com/about/terms

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD remains offered below 1.1800, looks at US data

EUR/USD remains offered below 1.1800, looks at US data

EUR/USD is still trading on the defensive in the latter part of Thursday’s session, while the US Dollar maintains its bid bias as investors now gear up for Friday’s key release of the PCE data, advanced Q4 GDP prints and flash PMIs.
 

GBP/USD bounces off monthly lows near 1.3430

GBP/USD bounces off monthly lows near 1.3430

GBP/USD is sliding in tandem with its risk-sensitive peers, drifting back towards the 1.3430 area, its lowest levels in the month. The move reflects a firmer Greenback, supported by another round of solid US data and a somewhat divided FOMC Minutes.

USD/JPY remains strong after Japan’s National CPI cools down

USD/JPY remains strong after Japan’s National CPI cools down

The Japanese Yen shows weakness against the US Dollar during the Asian trading session on Friday. The USD/JPY pair holds onto gains near its weekly high of 155.20 posted on Thursday. The pair is under pressure as the US Dollar continues to outperform due to signals from Federal Open Market Committee Minutes of the January policy meeting that officials see no rush for interest rate cuts, with inflation remaining persistently above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.


Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD hangs near two-week low vs. firmer USD ahead of key US macro releases

AUD/USD hangs near two-week low vs. firmer USD ahead of key US macro releases

The AUD/USD pair meets with a fresh supply during the Asian session on Friday and remains well within striking distance of a nearly two-week low, touched the previous day. Spot prices currently trade around the 0.7035 area as traders look to the key US macro releases before placing fresh directional bets.

USD/JPY remains strong after Japan’s National CPI cools down

USD/JPY remains strong after Japan’s National CPI cools down

The Japanese Yen shows weakness against the US Dollar during the Asian trading session on Friday. The USD/JPY pair holds onto gains near its weekly high of 155.20 posted on Thursday. The pair is under pressure as the US Dollar continues to outperform due to signals from Federal Open Market Committee Minutes of the January policy meeting that officials see no rush for interest rate cuts, with inflation remaining persistently above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

Gold eyes next breakout on US GDP, PCE inflation data

Gold eyes next breakout on US GDP, PCE inflation data

Gold sticks to recent gains around the $5,000-mark early Friday, biding time before the high-impact US macro events. The focus is now on the US fourth-quarter Gross Domestic Product, core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index and the Supreme Court’s ruling on President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Ethereum: Active addresses halt growth as US selling pressure eases

Ethereum: Active addresses halt growth as US selling pressure eases

Ethereum network growth has declined after two months of explosive increase. US selling pressure has eased following an improvement in the Coinbase Premium Index. ETH extends its range-bound move below the $2,107 resistance and above $1,740 .

Hawkish Fed minutes and a market finding its footing

Hawkish Fed minutes and a market finding its footing

It was green across the board for US Stock market indexes at the close on Wednesday, with most S&P 500 names ending higher, adding 38 points (0.6%) to 6,881 overall. At the GICS sector level, energy led gains, followed by technology and consumer discretionary, while utilities and real estate posted the largest losses.

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