- PPF Points
- 5,709
Risk Management is mandatory in the professional side of the market. Professional Traders are constantly mitigating risk factors and trade lot sizes that can be very large, as huge as 5 million shares at a time. Obviously these lot sizes are never seen on the public stock exchanges where retail traders trade because that would create a huge anomaly in the order transactions and price.
Risk Management is done by professionals to maintain a level of risk that is reasonable and controllable.
For you, it is about assessing first your risk versus profit potential. For my students who are just starting my training, it is all done via simulators at first. I encourage all traders to start with either Swing trading or Platform Position Trading which is a lower capital base style, that is very forgiving of mistakes.
Swing Trading is the style used if you want to actively trade stocks most days. Day trading is discouraged as it usually requires 3000 - 5000 hours of practice trades to start attaining the level of expertise, skill and profit required to be a day trader. It is simply an exceedingly hard style to master and actually make a living doing. It is promoted because traders do not know the facts about day trading and are all enamored with the myth of day trading.
Professionals gave up day trading way back in 2002 when decimals shrank the spreads to a penny or half penny on the pro side. They mostly swing trade.
Swing trading requires a 3 point profit potential minimum for every 1 point profit. NEVER use percentages as you can’t take a percentage to the bank. This is not a percentages “game” it is trading for serious money. Higher ratios during choppy markets or indecisive markets as we have now is advisable.
The way to calculate this is first you find a Buy Entry Signal for Swing Trading. Do not use reversal or continuation candles as these are no longer reliable. Learn the New Western Candlestick Entry Signals.
Then you calculate the prior recent runs of prior pro trader setups and runs. The stop loss must NOT be a percentage as the market making computers, HFTs, and some pro traders can SEE those stops and know that retail uses percentages so whipsaws are common and cause unnecessary losses.
Use the proper support level for your trading style. I teach all this in a comprehensive course for swing trading.
The run gain potential points versus the stop loss at the appropriate level for that specific stock swing run pattern is your risk to profit ratio. Again it should be a minimum of 3/1 and I prefer students choose stocks that are 4/1 -10/1. It is simply a matter of using the scans, sorts, etc provided to each student with their course.
The Risk Tolerance is something I teach but basically it is about assessing your personal risk tolerance. Everyone is different. If you are just starting out, then risk tolerance will be lower because you are not experienced and well trained. If you take a lot of losses, your risk tolerance declines along with your confidence and then trading becomes a nightmare scenario where you are sure you can make money but the losses are more than your profits.
I strive to convince traders to learn first, as I am a credentialed, retired professional and if I can convince traders to study, learn, apply and hone skills first, then they are successful from the start.
It is a lot harder and a much longer task to get rid of a student’s bad habits built on poor training and a lack of understanding how trading really should be done.
Risk Management is done by professionals to maintain a level of risk that is reasonable and controllable.
For you, it is about assessing first your risk versus profit potential. For my students who are just starting my training, it is all done via simulators at first. I encourage all traders to start with either Swing trading or Platform Position Trading which is a lower capital base style, that is very forgiving of mistakes.
Swing Trading is the style used if you want to actively trade stocks most days. Day trading is discouraged as it usually requires 3000 - 5000 hours of practice trades to start attaining the level of expertise, skill and profit required to be a day trader. It is simply an exceedingly hard style to master and actually make a living doing. It is promoted because traders do not know the facts about day trading and are all enamored with the myth of day trading.
Professionals gave up day trading way back in 2002 when decimals shrank the spreads to a penny or half penny on the pro side. They mostly swing trade.
Swing trading requires a 3 point profit potential minimum for every 1 point profit. NEVER use percentages as you can’t take a percentage to the bank. This is not a percentages “game” it is trading for serious money. Higher ratios during choppy markets or indecisive markets as we have now is advisable.
The way to calculate this is first you find a Buy Entry Signal for Swing Trading. Do not use reversal or continuation candles as these are no longer reliable. Learn the New Western Candlestick Entry Signals.
Then you calculate the prior recent runs of prior pro trader setups and runs. The stop loss must NOT be a percentage as the market making computers, HFTs, and some pro traders can SEE those stops and know that retail uses percentages so whipsaws are common and cause unnecessary losses.
Use the proper support level for your trading style. I teach all this in a comprehensive course for swing trading.
The run gain potential points versus the stop loss at the appropriate level for that specific stock swing run pattern is your risk to profit ratio. Again it should be a minimum of 3/1 and I prefer students choose stocks that are 4/1 -10/1. It is simply a matter of using the scans, sorts, etc provided to each student with their course.
The Risk Tolerance is something I teach but basically it is about assessing your personal risk tolerance. Everyone is different. If you are just starting out, then risk tolerance will be lower because you are not experienced and well trained. If you take a lot of losses, your risk tolerance declines along with your confidence and then trading becomes a nightmare scenario where you are sure you can make money but the losses are more than your profits.
I strive to convince traders to learn first, as I am a credentialed, retired professional and if I can convince traders to study, learn, apply and hone skills first, then they are successful from the start.
It is a lot harder and a much longer task to get rid of a student’s bad habits built on poor training and a lack of understanding how trading really should be done.