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Posts Tagged ‘winning’

SIDELINE ADJUSTMENTS TIP #5: CELEBRATE YOUR VICTORIES!

January 18th, 2012 Comments off

CELEBRATE YOUR VICTORIES: Make sure that you celebrate all of your winning trades in the stock market with an immediate gift to yourself. That way, you will reinforce the disciplined actions of playing the game correctly.

In addition to showing deep gratitude for your success, it’s also just plain fun to reward yourself with a small indulgence. Think like the lucky gambler on a trip to Las Vegas who, after making a small killing, treats himself to a steak dinner that is essentially “on the house.” While trading stocks is a serious business, it doesn’t mean that you can’t have some fun along the way.

Remember to use positive reinforcement in the form of special gifts to yourself as a means to insure that you keep yourself on the right track of trading the stock market correctly while enjoying the process of becoming a savvy player.

Comment: Celebrating victories has a natural way of stirring up and maintaining your future desire for success. Desire is largely a good thing. It is the seed within yourself that wants to manifest itself through you.

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“The will to win, the desire to succeed, the urge to reach your full potential… these are the keys that will unlock the door to personal excellence.”

Confusious ~ Ancient Chinese philosopher

SIDELINE ADJUSTMENTS TIP #4: WALK AWAY FROM THE CRAP TABLE!

January 18th, 2012 Comments off

WALK AWAY FROM THE CRAP TABLE: Move to the sidelines so you can refresh your spirit and refine your investing system while waiting for your next good buying opportunity.

Once you cash out on your stock market positions, be sure to immediately remove yourself from the game; as a result, you’ll be less inclined to second-guess your recent selling decisions. Realize that selling stocks early into market strength will often have you watching them continue to go up without you being along for the ride.

The easiest way to handle this anguish is to get away from the stock market and not monitor its performance for a healthy period of time. Don’t return to the stock market game until your emotional attachment to previously held positions has been significantly diminished and your mind is clear enough to play again from a well-balanced perspective.

Comment: Always respect how powerful the fear of missing out exists in gambling and the stock market. When you watch either activity continue upwards on the path to easy money, it’s hard not to get sucked into the action. As any savvy gamblers can attest, the smartest thing to do when you come to a decision to cash out (or sell in case of the stock market) is to get the heck out of the casino as quickly as possible.

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“Investments are like trains, and if you miss one, don’t worry because another one will come down the line.”

Charles Munger ~ Vice-Chairman of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway

SIDELINE ADJUSTMENTS TIP #3: ALWAYS LEAVE A GOOD TIP!

January 18th, 2012 Comments off

ALWAYS LEAVE A GOOD TIP: With an enlightened sense of gratitude, take part of your winnings and give it away to a worthy cause, treat your family, fund your retirement accounts, pay down your debts, increase your insurance coverage, or invest in your own self-education.

This simple habit is a way of giving immediate thanks for the good fortune you receive in a constructive manner. The naïve temptation may be to give yourself all of the credit for your successes in life; however, more enlightened individuals will sense that there are higher forces at work in the Universe to help them achieve their most noble dreams.

Be aware that all of your activities in life present opportunities to help yourself grow, assist others, and become a better person. If stock trading or investing makes you worse as a person, then you’re going about it all in the wrong manner.

Comment: A purely self-centered approach to life will more than likely lead to failure and misery. When you are blessed with good fortune, be sure to share in that abundance. It’s the deep understanding about how life really works that will allow you to enjoy success, happiness, and abundance in your future. Not to think would be naïve.

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“The grateful mind is constantly fixed upon the best. Therefore it tends to become the best. It takes the form or character of the best, and will receive the best”

Wallace D. Wattles ~ Author of The Science of Getting Rich

SIDELINE ADJUSTMENTS TIP #2:GREED IS NOT GOOD!

January 18th, 2012 Comments off

GREED IS NOT GOOD!: Gratitude is the spiritual energy that attracts abundance to you. Never allow your stock market success to feed your ego. Rather, let success add to your generosity and gratitude in order to revitalize your financial future.

This advice comes from applying spiritual or natural laws of the Universe to your personal investment philosophy. When an investor is properly guided by an empowering philosophy towards money, investing, people, and life, it will automatically add to his or her chances for long-term financial success.

Always remember the universal wisdom behind the philosophy of “more life to all and less to none,” so that you do not get swayed into doing underhanded things that intentionally help yourself at the expense of others. That way, you can avoid getting sucked into destructive strategies (i.e., the infamous Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme or the shady financial dealings of the fictional Gordon Gekko character portrayed by actor Michael Douglas in the 1987 movie Wall Street who uttered the now-famous signature phrase “Greed, for lack of a better word, is good.”) which are based more on personal greed than on the age-old universal philosophy of “more life to all and less to none.” (Note: The phrase “more life” means more increase in things of value. What all people essentially want is a better life with more freedom and abundance.)

Comment: This advice may come as a surprise or meet with heavy skepticism from several people. That’s because each of us has an inherent bias in our attitude about money. But a careful study in this area will reveal that true wealth and abundance over a person’s lifetime will be largely controlled by our deepest beliefs about how we earn , share, spend, invest, and enjoy money.

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“Fools and greed usually go hand in hand, which creates a field of opportunity for the rational man.”

Mary Buffet and David Clark ~ Authors of Buffetology (1999)

 

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #8: SEVEN OUT — LINE AWAY!

January 17th, 2012 Comments off

SEVEN OUT — LINE AWAY!: There is a natural lag time between the internal peak in momentum and the external top in price. Sell into the momentum strength rather than get caught in the gut-wrenching drop that follows the top in prices.

Realize that all rallies ultimately come to a sobering halt. Many of the smartest investors in Wall Street history have subscribed to the notion of selling early while the stock market is still rising. This is because guessing the exact top is nearly impossible to do on a consistent basis.

In addition, getting caught in a steep post-rally stock market decline is a painful and costly experience that you want to avoid. Don’t let the emotion of greed take control of your trading decisions when the majority of market barometers are signaling that it’s time to move aside.

Comment: For those who are not familiar with the game of craps, the term “seven out — line away” comes from a common phrase that is spoken by those in charge of running the casino’s dice table. This phrase is announced to the players at the craps table immediately after the dice are thrown and they turn face up with a total that calculates to a sum of seven. This signifies that the standard bet in the crap game called the “Pass Line” is lost and the money that is put on that “line” is taken “away.” This equates to saying to the crap players that they have now lost their bet and that the streak of good luck is over for the time being.

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“Repeatedly I have sold a stock while it still was rising — and that has been one reason why I have held onto my fortune. Many a time, I might have made a good deal more by holding a stock, but I would also have been caught in the fall when the price of the stock collapsed.”

Bernard Baruch ~ Legendary investor (1870–1965)

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #7: SENSE THE END OF THE ROLL!

January 17th, 2012 Comments off

SENSE THE END OF THE ROLL: The end of a rally is near when the people who missed the boat cannot stand sitting on the sidelines any longer. You must pick up your chips and leave a noisy crowded table filled with emotionally driven latecomers.

Recognize that when investor sentiment is extremely bullish, it is time to be out of all stock positions. However, this doesn’t mean that the market cannot continue upwards. It only means that the potential downside risk far exceeds that of the upside.

Therefore, based on the classic barometer of risk vs. reward, it is wiser to be on the sidelines sitting in cash than it is to remain in an overextended market whose time in the rally phase is about to expire soon.

Comment: When the market starts getting too crazy on the upside, it’s wise to take your profits and run. The temptation is always there to stay to the end of the rally but that often comes without warning and has an uncanny way of trapping greedy traders at the top. So it’s best to gauge the sentiment accurately, sell your stocks, and get away from the market.

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“One must simply get out while the getting is good. The secret is to hop off the elevator on one of the floors on the way up. In the stock market one good profit in hand is worth two on paper.”

William J. O’Neil ~ Author and founder of Investor’s Business Daily

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #6: LET IT RIDE BABY!

January 17th, 2012 Comments off

LET IT RIDE BABY!: You may choose to hold a small portion of your bets out longer for higher share prices. Sell as soon as your indicators suggest that the market has become overbought. Don’t get greedy by trying to guess the exact top.

The fact is that you never really know when a rally might catch fire and go further than anyone expects. The strategy of “letting it ride” helps you capture some extra profits on the occasional “hot roll.” The portion of money that you let ride is largely determined by the amount of “house money” you have accumulated through your cumulative trading activities. When you have a lot of extra chips stacked up in your investment pile, it’s a lot easier to let your profits ride without the fear of loss holding you back.

It is this uncanny sense of knowing when it’s time to “let it ride” and the guts to carry it through that often separates the big winners from the average players in both casino gambling and stock market trading.

Comment: You have to remember to take some early profits in order to protect your capital. And then you must also reserve some of your chips in order to go for bigger gains. That’s why it is usually smart to sell in gradual even amounts. The exception would be an unusually spectacular one day gain.

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“The stock market seems to move according to the rules of gravity; you can fall 1,000 feet very quickly, but climbing 1,000 feet takes quite a bit more stamina.”

Richard Saul Wurman ~ Author of The Wall Street Journal Guide to Understanding Money and Markets (1992)

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #5: TAKE DOWN YOUR BETS!

January 16th, 2012 Comments off

TAKE DOWN YOUR BETS: Smart selling may require you to reduce your exposure quickly when things do not work out as planned in the rally’s projected time frame. Accept occasional small losses as part of playing the game correctly.

Remember that risk-taking in the stock market is inherently failure-prone. Therefore, making a losing trade in the market should not in any way come as a surprise. Be willing to take an occasional small loss so that you can avoid the kind of stubborn thinking that eventually leads to excessive losses of capital.

View the act of taking small losses, based on your evaluations of underlying indicators, as a sign of disciplined trading. Always remind yourself in the heat of trading that the single most important reason that people lose money in the financial markets is that they don’t have the presence of mind to cut their losses short.

Comment: A poker player is well acquainted with the idea of folding their hand before the last card is shown. This is a smart but somewhat counter-intuitive move based on pure odds. When the mathematical odds say that your hand is weak, it is better to get out immediately than it is to hope for a miracle long-shot event to bail you out. Always remember that “hope” is the strategy of last resort for amateurs.

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“Perhaps my number one rule is: Don’t try to make a profit on a bad trade, just try to find the best place to get out.”

Linda Bradford Raschke ~ Professional trader

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #4: SELL ON OBVIOUS GOOD NEWS!

January 16th, 2012 Comments off

SELL ON OBVIOUS GOOD NEWS: The big announcement of favorable economic news has an uncanny way of causing the public to rush in with a surge of new investment money. If this good news occurs before the opening of trading, it will usually propel the stock market upwards for at least the first hour.

Savvy traders will often anticipate this market reaction by placing their orders to sell about a half hour into this early strength. They do this before the market rally has a chance to fade and reverse course to the downside.

It is a prudent strategy to sell at least some, but not necessarily all, of your short-term trading position (play money) on any piece of obvious good economic news. This type of selling serves two important purposes: (1) it takes advantage of an often temporary swing in over-enthusiastic public buying, and (2) it relieves the natural uncomfortable urge to sell in order to prevent a gain from turning into a loss.

When it comes to both buying and selling stocks, heed the words of legendary stock market technician, Joseph E. Granville, who so profoundly coined the phrase, “The obvious is obviously wrong.”

Comment: When it comes to buying stocks, the human emotion that does most of the public in is greed. It is the fear of missing out that causes poor players to rush into the market at the wrong time. You can capitalize on this occurrence by selling some of your shares to those who are too eager to buy and too impatient to wait.

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“Nobody ever went broke taking profits.”

Wall Street Adage

DECIDE WHEN TO SELL TIP #3: SELL NEAR THE CLOSE!

January 16th, 2012 Comments off

SELL NEAR THE CLOSE: Another good time to sell is during the last half hour of trading. This is particularly true before a weekend or three-day holiday when unexpected bad news could trap you in the wrong position.

Today’s stock market can also be subjected to manipulation by large hedge funds, resulting in strong moves during the last hour of trading. Since hedge funds usually base their trading decisions on computerized statistical models, these last-minute advances may not be based on any tangible information that will carry over into the next trading session.

A savvy investor can take advantage of these strong erratic moves during the last half hour by simply selling into the market’s temporary strength. This strategy is particularly useful when the character of recent market behavior shows a tendency to operate without any memory of the previous day.

Comment: Sometimes you just have to take the money and run. And when you get a strong close in the last half hour, it makes a lot of sense to sell into that market strength. You never know when that type of move is merely done to set up shorts in a thin market.

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“The most liquid period is the opening. Liquidity starts falling off pretty quickly after the opening. The second most liquid time of the day is the close. Trading volume typically forms a U-shaped curve throughout the day. There’s a lot of liquidity right at the opening, it then falls off, reaching a nadir at midday, and then it starts to climb back up, reaching a secondary peak on the close. Generally speaking, this pattern holds in almost every market. It’s actually pretty amazing.”

Monroe Trout ~ Professional trader