Plan Your Trade & Trade Your Plan
by Chuck Hackett
Company:
Access Trading
Phone:
888-443-6140
E-Mail:
chuck@accesstrading.com
Website:
www.AccessTrading.com
Developing A Trading Plan
Many who trade futures successfully rely on a trading plan. Just like a business plan outlines in
detail the establishment and development of a proposed business, a trading plan outlines in detail
a structure for trading. There are two major components of a trading plan: a method of price
prediction which signals if and when to buy or sell a particular futures contract, and a risk
management program which dictates the amount of money to risk on any trade, and specifies
when to cut losses. Trading plans are fluid in the sense that they are constantly being tested and
amended so as to improve overall performance and profitability. Strict observance of the rules of
the trading plan is the hallmark of a successful futures trader commodity futures broker, futures
trader, commodities futures trading, financial and commodity futures markets, paper trading, full
service broker assisted accounts.
Price Prediction
Profit on a futures trade is earned if you buy low and sell high, or sell high and buy back low. While
simple in concept, this requires you, the trader, to have some idea of where prices will be several
weeks or months from now. That is, it requires some sort of price prediction methodology. Most
traders tend to rely on some variation of fundamental or technical analysis to predict prices. Many
traders also spend considerable time and energy attempting to identify new measurements or
signals that provide the edge in predicting prices. Stories abound of traders who claim to have
discovered proof-positive techniques for predicting prices, and then offer to sell the information to
you for a price. In my experience, genuine fool-proof techniques are very hard to come by, and I
would advise you to be very careful and skeptical of such grand claims.
Money Management For Traders
My mission here is to lay out a working example of how money management fits into the trading
plan. You don't have to follow this exact example in your trading, but I believe that even if you
apply only part of it, you will greatly improve your chances of survival and of ultimately becoming a
member of that magical ten percent winner's club. First, a little background.
Most traders seem to be more concerned with the latest and greatest method of getting into a
market. There are more ways of giving yourself a reason to get in than you can shake a stick at:
chart patterns, breakouts, indicators, fundamentals, astrological events, neural nets, boredom, and
on and on. Getting in is the easiest thing to do. Of course it is important, after all if you get in at the
right place you will have an easier time getting out with a profit and avoiding a loss.
It is interesting to note how much less is written about getting out than getting in, since getting out
is just important as getting in. Many traders feel they have made a terrible mistake immediately
after having gotten in. This reaction has given birth to a new kind of market order known among
brokers as the "CIC", which stands for "cancel if close".
This order is implemented when a trader doesn't want to take a loss according to the original stop
loss plan, and instead wants to risk more to see if the trade will work out. They don't trust the
hours of analysis they did that told them to "get in now before you miss this beautiful trade!" The
sense of having made a mistake becomes so strong that they get back out with a small loss, or
hold on, blindly riding the trade through profits to a large loss.
Either way, the idea of money management is usually an afterthought. It occurs to the trader just
after getting in, and it goes something like this: "OH----, it's going against me, I hope I don't get
stopped out where my stop loss is now because it would kill my account!" After about three to five
of these trading "experiences", the average trader simply won't have enough left to get "in" in any
market again and will often give up trading entirely.
For the broker, it's bad because he has to replace that client, and that means a lot of work. For the
trader it's worse, of course, because now the money is gone and he or she didn't even have a
chance to learn anything useful about trading, except that it can magically evaporate money.
It 's common knowledge over eighty percent of traders lose their money and stop trading within
their first year, and that about ten percent of traders get the other traders' money, year after year. If
the odds are stacked against new traders nine to one, why do they still want to start trading?
Usually the answer is they think they have a better way of "getting in". The fact is new traders
often do have better ways of "getting in". It's the getting out part that gets all messed up.
What is it that the ten percent of traders who seem to consistently take everyone else's money are
doing differently than everyone else? Is it some super secret way of "getting in"? When these
wizards are interviewed, they often say: "I let my profits ride, and cut my losses quickly." Hmmmm.
No kidding. Others offer more helpful advice like "It's easy: buy low and sell high". Ok, we're all
ready to trade for a living now! What are these wizards really saying between the lines that
separate their results from everyone else's? The answer is simple, but ninety percent of traders
don't do it, and probably wouldn't do it if they knew how.
The answer is to treat trading like a business, which specifically means having a business plan.
Even more specifically it means having a trading plan that applies the concept of money
management before deciding how to get into a market. For most traders, the feeling of being "in
the market" is more rewarding than whether they actually win or lose. For them, a real trading plan
would get in the way of what they are really trying to get out of the markets, which is a specific
flavor of excitement. All they have to have is a half-decent excuse to "get in" to immediately taste
the sweet tension of being in a trade.
The cycle deepens when the sense of relief felt after getting out of a losing trade becomes more
powerful and satisfying than the act taking a profit. If anyone has trouble believing this, have him
try reserving a hotel room in Las Vegas on short notice.
The first step is to select markets that you can afford to trade. Let's consider a how money
management might be applied to a $3500 dollar account. If you consider yourself a conservative
trader you could select markets to trade in using the following guidelines:
1. Take the current price of a contract and multiply it by its size to get the current total value of
the contract.
2. Take the total contract value and multiply it by 20%.
3. If this amount is more than $3500, then find another contract.
4. If this amount is less than $3500, then divide by nine.
5. Set your stop risking this amount.
6. Select and apply your entry method.
7. Move your stops up behind your trade, let it run, or consider taking early profits.
What have you accomplished by going through these steps?
First, you have protected yourself against becoming over leveraged.
Second, you have set yourself up for nine tries in a market instead of the typical one or two.
Third, you have decided where to get out if things don't work
Fourth, you have taken steps towards removing yourself emotionally from the traps of fear and
greed.
IMPORTANT: Placing a risk reducing type order such as a "stop-loss order" which is intended to
limit a loss to a certain amount may not be effective because market conditions may make it
impossible to execute.
Which markets currently meet the criteria for a $3500 dollar account?
Remember, this is only a suggestion regarding how to do this. You should work out your own
method depending on your risk comfort level.
Note: Contract values may have changed.
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