Market Wisdom for Smart Technical Traders – Part 1
Further Reading
You have a choice on which style of trading you would like to adapt in your own trading in the stock markets. (Or the forex markets if you're adventurous). That is either to trade fundamentally or technically. Some traders like to mix it up a bit and trade a hybrid system that takes into consideration both the company situation and the chart behaviour. I like to do a bit of hybrid trading myself but in the end, the chart behaviour rules my trading system. In the next few posts I will be hashing through the many maxims and trading lessons that I have found to be true from my own trading experience and that other traders always seem to crow about in various books, seminars and tapes. So stick around, I hope you will pick up a few new tips.
Practical Trading Wisdom: "Depend on Numbers and Not The News"
Depend on the numbers not the news
This may be a contradictory statement to the above about hybrid trading, but don't fall into the trap of depending on the news too much if you are trading technically. As a technical chartist, I wish the news will just shut up and leave me alone. Personally, I have fallen into the trap of listening to the news and because of this my technical trading will become somewhat biased. For example, BHP Billiton announces a new discovery that one of their mines have a massive reserve of uranium, but the charts are sharply indicating a sell. Will you buy long into the stock (Remember this exercise if for traders not investors)? The next day the stock price falls with no other reason than investors profit taking from recent highs?
A similar rule to the rule depending on your charts is when you talk about live trades to anyone - your mates, your broker and get some sort of feedback, be it positive, neutral or negative - any reaction will tend to influence your trading. For example, you call up your forex broker and he/she comments that they are personally shorting the currency pair when you are going long... what will you think? It could undermine your confidence in your own analysis. Probably the best you can do is turn it into a learning experience and ask them why they are shorting and what their time horizon was. But would you still put in the trade?
Come back for the next part soon!
- How to Trade Forex and Gold Options
- How to Trade the Gold Price and Profit!
- Forex Trading the EUR/USD Pair € EURO and $ US Dollar
- How to Trade Stock Market Indices S&P500
- How to Trade Crude Oil
- Forex Trading Psychology
- What Are Broker Recommendations?
- Free Tickets to Trading & Investing Seminar & Expo ($18) Brisbane 2013
- Stock Calc App
- All About Warrants
- Introduction to Exchange Traded Funds
- Introduction to Exchange Traded Funds: Features
- Introduction to Exchange Traded Funds: Domestic ETFs
- Introduction to Exchange Traded Funds: International ETFs
- Exchange Traded Commodities
- Australian Stock Scan
- Australian Online Share Trading
- List of Trading Books
- Interesting Thoughts about the Australian Dollar
- What's the Meaning of Hawkish?
- Do You Know How To Use the P/E Ratio
- Trading, Religion and Politics - Do They Have Anything in Common?
- Shares that are Volatile that Double and Half in the Short Term
- Telstra (TLS) T3
- Margin Call by E-mail
- The Cost of Holding a Position
- Lack of Disclosure: Compensation from ASX Listed Company
- Unrealistic Returns and Benchmarks
- CMC Markets Down
- Quality versus Quantity Forex Trading
- Woolworths 1H Sales $30.7bn up 3.2%
Date added 31-01-2013 - ASIC Fines CommBank's CommSec
Date added 25-09-2012 - Industry Super Network Calls to Ban High Frequency Trading (HFT)
Date added 22-09-2012 - NAB Launches Online Share Trading Platform
Date added 19-09-2012 - Reserve Bank of Australia Says 23 Countries Holding AUD
Date added 18-09-2012 - Australia Post Digital Mailbox
Date added 10-09-2012 - Winners and Losers of Trading for Week 2
Date added 16-01-2012 - 2012's First Week of the Best and Worst Traded Stocks
Date added 09-01-2012 - 2011's Last Best and Worst Traded Stocks
Date added 05-01-2012 - Best and Worst Pre-Christmas Traded Stocks
Date added 30-12-2011 - Trading Winners and Losers for Dec. 12-16
Date added 19-12-2011 - Best and Worst Traded Stocks for Dec. 5-9
Date added 13-12-2011 - Top 3 Best and Worst Traded Stocks
Date added 05-12-2011 - ASX Glitch Trading Halt
Date added 27-10-2011 - Worst Trade Stocks (and the Best)
Date added 06-08-2011
Top 150 Public Companies Listed on the Australian Stockmarket as at 29/05/2009
- BHP Billiton
- Westpac Banking Corporation (WBC)
- Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA)
- National Australia Bank (NAB)
- Telstra (TLS)
- ANZ
- News Corporation (NWS)
- Woolworths Limited(WOW)
- Woodside Petroleum Limited (WPL)
- Rio Tinto
- Westfield Group (WDC)
- Westfarmers Limited (WES)
- QBE Insurance
- CSL
- Newcrest Mining Limited (NCM)
- Origin Energy Limited (ORG)
- Santos Limited (STO)
- AMP Limited (AMP)
- Macquarie Group (MQG)
- Foster’s Group Limited (FGL)