All posts by Frank Mariano

Stock Market Trading – Fear And Perception Secrets

When looking at futures stock market trading curbs, it`s a well-known saying that `traders should have a healthy fear of the market`. It seems like a perfectly reasonable assumption to make. The market is volatile, and each trade you make is to some extent unpredictable. But, it`s one thing to learn to accept the risk of the market, and another entirely to be afraid of it.

Ninety-five percent of the futures stock market trading curbs errors you are probably going to make, those errors which will cause you to consistently lose money, will be due to your attitudes your fear about being wrong. Fears of losing money, of missing out on profitable trades, or of leaving money on the table will cloud your thinking when you are trading. Your fears can cause you to act in such a way that what you are afraid will happen. If you`re afraid of being wrong, your fear will influence your perceptions of market information in a way that will cause you to do something that ends up making you wrong.

When you are afraid of something happening, all other possible outcomes cease to exist. You can`t perceive the other possibilities, or act on them properly if you do recognize them, because your fear paralyzes you. Physically, fear causes people to freeze or to run. Mentally, it causes them to narrow their attention to the object of their fear. This means that thoughts about other positive stock market trading curbs outcomes, as well as other information from the market, are barred from your mind. You can`t think about all the rational things you have learned about the market until the event is over and you are no longer afraid. Then you will think to yourself, `I knew that. Why did not I think of it then?` or, `Why could not I act on it then?`

It`s hard to understand that the source of these problems is usually our own attitudes. Many of the thinking patterns that adversely affect our stock market trading curbs are a natural result of the ways in which we were brought up to see the world. These thought patterns are so deeply ingrained that it rarely occurs to traders that the source of their trading difficulties is internal, and derived from their state of mind. It can seem more natural to see the source of a problem as external, in the market. This happens because it feels like the market is causing pain, frustration, and dissatisfaction. Most traders do not want to be concerned with such abstract considerations as considering how their thoughts influence their trades, but understanding how beliefs, attitudes, and perception effect your futures stock market trading curbs are as fundamental as learning how to serve is in tennis.

You could say that understanding and controlling your perceptions of market information is important only to the extent that you want to achieve consistent results. You don`t have to know anything about yourself or the markets to make a winning trade, just as you don`t have to know the proper way to swing a tennis racket or golf club in order to hit a good shot occasionally. The first time you played golf, for instance, you might have hit several good shots throughout your round, even though you hadn`t learned any particular technique. But your score was still probably well over 100 for 18 holes. Obviously, to improve your overall score, you needed to learn technique. The same is true for developing good stock market trading curbs in your trading.

Traders need technique to achieve consistent results. If a trader isn`t aware of, or doesn`t understand, how their beliefs and attitudes affect their perception of market information, it seems as if it is the market`s behaviour that is causing the lack of consistency. As a result of this perception, it stands to reason that the best way to avoid losses and achieve consistent profits is to learn more about the markets.

This bit of logic is a trap that almost all traders fall into at some point. Unfortunately, this approach doesn`t work. The market simply offers too many variables to consider, and these variable often conflict. Furthermore, there are no limits to the market`s behavior. It can do anything at any time. In fact, since every person who trades is a market variable, it can be said that any single trader can cause virtually anything to happen.

That means no matter how much you learn about the market`s behavior, and no matter how brilliant an analyst you become, you will never learn enough to anticipate every possible way the market can move. If you are afraid of being wrong or losing money, you will never learn enough to compensate for the negative effects these fears will have on your ability to be objective and to act without hesitation. You can`t be confident in the face of constant uncertainty by acquiring information. The hard, cold reality of stock market trading curbs is that every trade has an uncertain outcome. Unless you learn to completely accept the possibility of an uncertain outcome, you will try, either consciously or unconsciously, to avoid any possibility you consider painful. In the process, you will subject yourself to any number of costly self-generated errors.

You can get over the bad futures stock market trading curbs by accepting the risk, and moving beyond your fears, you can greatly increase your ability to be a consistently profitable trader. This requires self-knowledge and discipline, but the rewards that can be attained on the market more than make the effort worthwhile.

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Advanced Nicolas Darvas Entry Tactics

Introducing a couple of additional advanced Nicolas Darvas entry tactics that a trader might use when trading the Modern Darvas method. Now in my opinion these two additions are contrary to the original Darvas’ methodology, that said keeping in mind this course is the definitive guide to Nicolas Darvas trading, I felt it necessary to include them.

The two additional tactics are the aggressive entry and the delayed entry. Each entry tactic is suited to different types of traders and trading situations.

When trying to choose which entry tactic to use, it is best to consider the situation. For example, suppose a trader finds a stock that has already formed several Darvas boxes. An aggressive entry into the stock might be more beneficial and profitable, than a classic entry. The classic Nicolas Darvas entry tactic is to buy as soon as the stock price breaks out of the current Darvas box, and the Modern method is to buy the day after the stock closes above the Darvas box. Both of these methods would cause a trader to lose a portion of the profits in this situation. The alternative Nicolas Darvas entry tactics exist to allow traders to enter into a trend in such a way that the trend yields more profit.

Aggressive entry occurs when a trader buys a stock before it has broken out of its Darvas box. The trader buys in anticipation of the stock breaking out of its box. Buying before the breakout is risky because there is no assurance that the stock will actually break out of its Darvas box. The trader is making a guess that it will. The advantage to buying before the breakout is that the entry price will be closer to the stop-loss order.

Another consequence of buying before the breakout is that a trader can possibly capture more profit from the beginning of the trend. However, in today’s volatile markets, a stock is almost as likely to plummet as to rise. Buying before the breakout puts the entry price closer to the stop-loss order. Should the stock plummet, the trader will lose less money.

On the other hand, delayed entry is when a trader will not buy on or directly after the breakout, but will wait for the price to come back down. In a trend where a stock is just starting to form Darvas boxes, this tactic can increase the amount of profit. Instead of buying on a high, the trader will buy on a low, most likely one of the lows used to form the next Darvas box. This entry point is closer to the stop-loss order set by the previous valid Darvas box and minimizes any loss should the trend fail.

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