Welcome! Have a profitable trading day ahead of you!

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Plan a Trade and Trade a Plan

3) Plan a Trade and Trade a Plan:
Without doubt, no trader will last long if he doesn't plan every trade.
But there is absolutely no point in making a plan for a trade if you are not
disciplined enough to follow it.

A plan should cater for every eventuality. As Richard Dennis (Turtles fa
said, "Don't worry about where the prices are going. Worry about what
you are going to do when they get there."


Think about what is being said here. Once you put your money down on
trade you can not control the prices.
So stop worrying about what could
happen and concentrate on you trigger points and what you will do when
these points are violated
. By doing this your trading stops being emotional
and now becomes very systematic and stress free.


Look at this example:
1) you like the look of stock XYZ Corp. currently trading at $40 and you
place a buy 100, stop in at $42. This is just the beginning. You must then
ask and answer the following questions:

* IF filled on this trade where will where will I place my initial stop
loss. i.e "How much of my capital am I willing to lose?"

* IF filled on this trade how will I take profits? By how much will I
trail my stop? What exit strategies will I use?

* IF filled, will i add more shares as the trade goes my way?

* If filled and the share does not show a profit after X weeks, will
I get out, or will I let my trailing stop exit me from the trade.

* IF stopped out of this trade will i be willing to try and get back in,
or completely scratch the trade and look else-where?

2) So having made a complete plan, prior to entering the trade you place
the order to buy 100 XYZ corp at: $42.

3) You are filled at $42 1/4, automatically you place a stop order in at
$39. No guessing it's done automatically.

4) The trade goes your way and a second buy order is placed in at $50.

5) You buy 100 more at $50 and the stop is now moved up to $45.

6) The trade goes your way and you keep raising your stop at a safe
distance behind.

7) Your sell stop is hit at $130 and you exit the trade with a massive
profit.

Do you see now that by having a plan everything becomes automatic.
You know where to get in, place stops, add and exit. In short you are
now trading professionally and not from emotion.

Not once did you have to ask for opinion. Not once were you afraid
of letting a profit get away, or of a loss becoming too big.
Simply put, if you make a plan and have the discipline to follow it
trading becomes very simple and stress free.

In my many years of trading one point I try to get across to other
would be traders is the market will always do its utmost to throw
you off track. Once in a share it's a little like riding a wild horse.
The prices will thrash around violently shaking off all scared and
emotional traders. It will only be the ones who have the discipline
to follow a set plan that will benefit from the full move.


If you ever find your-self having to ask some-one for an opinion
on a stock you hold then it can only be because you either have not
made a plan,
or you are second guessing the plan, in which case you may
as well not bother making one in the first place.

Planning a trade should be no different from planning a journey.
You must plan for all kinds of events. Especially the unforeseen ones.
Most of the time a trade will go your way and the plan will barely
have to be looked at but what if the share gaps down? flys up? goes
sideways for six weeks, the market crashes, the company announces a
complete surprise announcement which makes the share gain $30 in
one day? If you aren't prepared for these surprises then when
one does happen you are going to find yourself wandering what to do.
And once your are trading from the "hip" and not from a plan then
expect your results to worsen.

Having a plan totally removes all opinion and emotion from a
trade and anything which does this can only be good news.

Time and time again at seminars and meetings I hear the same
questions:

" I bought ABC stock at $25 a few months ago, do you think I
should still keep it?"

When I hear such questions I (discreetly) shake my head. How
can any-one trade such a way? Where is his plan? When he got into
the trade where was he get out point? Basically what the hell is
this guy doing trading? Does he really expect to out-perform the
market when he has to ask a third party about his stock holdings?

If this guy had a plan and more importantly the discipline to
follow he would never ask such a question.

This is probably the single biggest reason people love to
follow opinion. People just love to be told to do something
rather than thinking of it for them-selves.
Reading a recent
Internet magazine I was astounded by the number of followers
some of the tip sheets have. The top ones have from 15,000
to 80,000. Are any of these followers really making them-selves
better traders? I have no doubt a small percentage are but the
majority aren't. Why? Because by following some-one else they
abondon the principles laid down in this book. There is no
system. Responsibility has no been shfted to the guru (so there's
the excuse for the losses in place) Worse of all they do not
have a solid plan.

When you start following your own plans you will find your-
self not wanting to listen to out-side opinion.
If you hold ADF
stock and bought at $60 and your initial stop loss is at $56 then
why would you care if the local guru is saying, "Sell ADF it's
over-valued and will fall to $20." For one, he is just as likely
to be wrong as right and secondly if your stop is at $56 then let
this kick you out of the trade. At least that way when you ask
your-self "did I follow my rules today?" the answer will be YES.


I can guarantee before Warren Buffet, or George Soros buys
$50,000,000 worth of stocks they know exactly what they will do
if prices swing one way or another. Could you imagine Warren Buffet
thinking, " gee, I bought $20,000,000 worth of DFG stock and it's
down by 15%. what shall I do?"
No way! And why should it be any
different for your trading?
The point is it doesn't matter whether
you are trading with a $5,000 account or a $50,000,000 the
principles are the same. You must eliminate all emotion and follow
YOUR plan.

To be a winner in the markets you can never trade from emotion.
and the only way to eliminate emotion is to have the iron
discipline to follow your own plan.
It's said most traders never
plan a trade never mind have the discipline to follow one.

If you want to become one of the few market winners you must

"Plan every trade and trade every plan"

(Excerpt from 7 Habits of Highly Successful Traders)

No comments: