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Hello Bunyip,bunyip said:Reading lots of TA books and getting a huge amount of information can be a two-edged sword.
On the one hand, by trying out numerous ideas, concepts, strategies, indicators etc, you eventually learn what works and what doesn't, and just as importantly, what sort of trading style/system suits your personality and fits in with your lifestyle.
On the other hand I've seen traders who had so much knowledge and information that they didn't know if they were Arthur or Martha.
Too many indicators, too many strategies, too much information, too many conflicting signals...the long and short of it was that that they had difficulty making rational trading decisions.
I've always maintained that the simpler your system the better you'll trade.
But I've found that a huge amount of knowledge and information is not conductive to formulating and implementing a simple system.
Sure it can be done.....I myself trade just a couple of very simple setups. But having read more than fifty books on Technical Analysis and tried out just about all the strategies and indicators they taught me about, I can tell you it was a struggle to sort the wheat from the chaff and toss out much of the information in my head, and trim it all down to just a couple of setups that repeat over and over again.
It would have been a far easier journey for me if at the outset I'd found someone who said...... 'Look - here's a simple strategy I've traded profitably for years.....just trade this one strategy, forget about learning anything else, forget about reading all those TA books, trade only this strategy, control your losses, and you'll do very well over time."
Regrettably, such a person didn't appear at the start of my trading career, so what I did instead was read all those books and buy a couple of courses and put in the hard yards until I found out what worked and what didn't, and what suited my lifestyle.
Bunyip
bunyip said:(From: Which one do you use? Technical or fundamental analysis – Post 310.
... I suggest you start with Weinstein's book which does an excellent job of explaining in clear language how to apply the concept of relative strength to find the outperforming sectors and the outperforming stocks in those sectors.
Then you could read Frank Watkins book - he's another educator with the ability to explain simple, effective concepts and setups and show you how to incorporate them in your trading.
After that, you could spend a few quid and buy yourself some decent technical analysis software that can scan for the setups outlined by Weinstein and Watkins.
Then you can spend the next 18 months looking at thousands of charts of stocks, futures and currencies going back 15 or 20 years, or preferably longer, and learning how to reconnise (sic) the setups, just like I did. Then you can spend another 6 to 12 months paper trading to see if you can make these concepts work for you.
Hello Dutchie,dutchie said:G'day Magdoran
That has been my experience too.
You have also touched on a very important factor - that of a mentor.
A mentor may be able to let you take shortcuts, as you mentioned, especially if he knows you and what your aims are. A personal one that you respect is ideal.
Belonging to a Forum like this is also beneficial as substitute mentor - all a member has to do is ask.
Cheers
Dutchie
Maybe it's simply because they were simply not ever going to be any good at it - not all people are a Miles Davis or a Beethoven.The other problem was with the ability to create their own music, either they couldn’t develop the ability to conceive of pieces in their head, or they were rendered unable to improvise because they needed the music in front of them to play because of the early way that they were taught, and just couldn’t compose.
Van Tharp quotes work by Le Beau (from memory) which points out that after 5 periods, any given entry pattern is no better than a random coin toss in terms of overall expectancy.But it is the pattern recognition, and the ability to imagine future events that is a key ability I would argue for using T/A.
How many newbie traders will be willing to do this - after all, they might miss out on all those profits on the one way stock market elevator?I advocate that they either paper trade for at least 12 months if not much more (maybe even 2-3 years)
Not at all. We agree here. Trading profitably is simplicity itself...but it is NOT EASY. It is extraordinarily HARD, but not for the reasons that novices think when they start. ("If I just change the MA from 30 to 28 days then I'll make twice as much money...")Where I think we differ is that I believe this is one of the hardest games in town.
Hello Michael,MichaelD said:Maybe it's simply because they were simply not ever going to be any good at it - not all people are a Miles Davis or a Beethoven.
To turn this analogy back to trading it would seem to imply that you consider that everyone has it in them to succeed at trading using one approach or another, and I don't believe this is true at all.
As a first text which will give you all the essential concepts to trend trade profitably, I reckon it's hard to beat Trading Secrets by Louise Bedford.billhill said:i would like to know any quality books that deal with trend trading.
Oh no, Michael, not again.MichaelD said:As a first text which will give you all the essential concepts to trend trade profitably, I reckon it's hard to beat Trading Secrets by Louise Bedford.
Indeed I am stubborn (and yes I like stirring on occasion), however I still haven't read any book on trend trading which I consider is better than Bedford as an *introductory* text. If I read a better one, I'll change my opinion. (We'll have to agree to disagree.)Magdoran said:You are stubborn aren’t you?
Now, Michael, do tell me, have you read any of the works we were discussing yet? Have you read Douglas yet (not T/A by the way)?
Hello Michael,MichaelD said:Indeed I am stubborn (and yes I like stirring on occasion), however I still haven't read any book on trend trading which I consider is better than Bedford as an *introductory* text. If I read a better one, I'll change my opinion. (We'll have to agree to disagree.)
Yes, I have now read Douglas. There are many powerful insights in Douglas and I have taken much of it on board...but I was most of the way there already. I had well and truly accepted the concept of each trade as a probabilistic outcome before reading Douglas. The most potent concept for me contained within Douglas is that the market simply "is" and it is our superimposed beliefs that generate an emotional response to it. (The boy vs dog examples were particularly thought-provoking.)
Identifying uptrends: Price is going up.billhill said:Basically i want more advanced information on identifying trends, how to enter them effectively and how to exit them.
Hello Billhill,billhill said:Thanks guys for the input. Actually have red befords book MichaelD and magdoran i have read the previous posts but whats these do not indicate is whether they are good for teaching trend trading as opposed to other technical techniques such as trading breakouts. Basically i want more advanced information on identifying trends, how to enter them effectively and how to exit them.
Ok billhill,billhill said:Thanks michaelD and magdoran. MichaelD am actually currently reading van Tharp so i seem to be on the right track. Magdoran i'm trying not to come off as ignorant and beleive me i have read as much as i can on T/A books on this site. I also understant that T\A is about ones own system and not that simply copied from other traders. What i merely wish to do is prioritise my selection of books to those that others have found particually useful.
I do not wish to waste time reading books that in the sceme of things have helped very few people. I think i may have badly worded my first post. I have read enough to identify that a mid to long term trend tradings system would suite my personality. However i do wish to learn as much as possible. What i was trying to say in my first post was from those book previousely mentioned and those not could anyone recommend ones they have found helpful in developing a trend trading system that is all. People recommend books but for all i know they may be entirely based on breakout trading for example. I hope this clarifies what i am getting at.
Thanks billhill.
coyotte said:BUT as I have stated in prior threads -- LEARN TO TRADE --- Analyists are a dime a dozen --- I've had one very well respected Analyist on this site imply that my methods can not work -- well guess what ! ---- LHG hitting $3.00 again from 3 out of 3 trades since lare Sept --- thats the difference between a Trader and a Analyist --- I don't care where my info comes from --just trade it !
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