| Beginners Forum Interested in trading but don't know where to start? Post any questions you may have here. |
![]() | | Tweet | |
| | #9 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? Example: New person that is tedious and scared about losing. Possible markets: Slow moving stocks, bonds Example: New person that wants to jump in and wants movements Possible markets: Most futures, forex | ||
| |
|
| | #10 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? I think the bottom-line is virtually everyone rushes into the few major, high volume, must well known markets but many times the real opportunities are somewhere else. Which probably explains at least in some part, why failure rate can be high for new traders. The put themselves right in the middle of some of the best traders in the world and have to compete on the majors. Quote:
| ||
| |
|
| | #11 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? The other thing is newbies should trade slow. Basic TA actually works. But few traders win with it and I think its much more to do with the fear/greed issues that Mark Douglas described in the disciplined trader and TITZ. The faster the trade the more gut and emotion get to have a place to play. It takes the brain 15-30 minutes for the chemicals to disperse after an emotionally charged event! So daily or hourly or H4 are great timescales for a beginning trader. And even an experienced trader ... less stress, more time to think, slippage and commission matter less, and the TA is clearer as the market noise to signal ratio declines. | ||
| |
|
| The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Kiwi For This Useful Post: | ||
| | #12 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? ![]() I would also suggest reading the Mark Douglas books you mention. Both very good reads and many of the successful traders I know have read at least one of those, and usually multiple times. Quote:
| ||
| |
|
| | #13 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? Quote:
I like your choice of Bonds and notes, as they trade with less volatility (most of the time). You might also want to check out the Euro Bund | ||
| |
|
| | #14 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? 1) have a system 2) backtest the system 3) know the max drawdown that has happened with that system 4) allocate 5-10x the max drawdown to trade one contract (if futures), or 5) allocate 5-10x required margin to trade one contract Otherwise: 1) you will be trading on emotion, and will lose money 2) you will wake up one day and some event will cause your position to spike against you 3) you will panic and sell on the bottom, or cover your short at the top You can't be overleveraged. Do you really want your total equity to be moving up and down 20-40% every day? Do you want to sleep at night? Currently the TF has a daily true range of $1456 over the past three months. The exchange required margin is $3500 - so an average daily move is over 40% of margin. Do you REALLY want to subject yourself to volatility of that magnitude? The ES currently has an average daily true range of $845, and the YM $717. The ES margin is $5625 so it moves 15%, and the YM margin is $6500 so the daily move is 11%. With your money moving up and down like this you really have to be able to take crazy moves against your position and still do the right thing, stick with your system, stay calm, and stick with your plan or system. If I were a beginning trader I would just stick with something very simple - put the odds in my favor. Pick a stock that's going up - one that you know, and trade a small position from the long side. Unless you are wealthy you will be uncomfortable with hourly swings in your equity of more than a few hundred dollars. If you buy a few thousand dollars of NFLX and you have breakfast, and come back and it's down $400 this might make you sell the positiion, just as it's going up again. All sorts of things can happen to you in the market that are out of your control - unconfirmed rumors, unusual events over the weekend, your power goes out and you can't see your positions or trade, your computer crashes just when the market is moving rapidly, you sleep 8 hours per day, you leave your computer to have breakfast, you get a bad headache and can't look at the trading screen, and on it goes. In other words, life happens while you're trying to trade. If you're over leveraged or don't have a precise system, you'll lose money, and often, all of your money. I pass this on after 31 years of trading..... | ||
| |
|
| | #15 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? Of course its a function of volatility, $/tick, margin and the traders objectives, account size and risk tolerance. | ||
| |
|
| | #16 | ||
![]() | Re: What Market Should You Start With? Quote:
| ||
| |
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| ∧ Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Actively Day Trading One Single Market VS Day Trading a Handful of Markets? | HighStakes | Day Trading and Scalping | 118 | 07-14-2011 03:45 PM |
| If This Was the Last Market You Could Ever Trade...What Would It Be? | MadMarketScientist | Trading and the Markets | 14 | 07-30-2010 12:38 PM |
| Market Profile in 24 Hr Markets?? | dsalas | Market Profile | 19 | 05-10-2010 02:00 PM |