It is not hard to become crorepati; Here are 8 tips to enhance intraday trading
"History reveals shorter the time frame in investing more challenging it becomes. Lots of traders, trade for living or want to make money from intraday trading by deploying less margin but often end up losing it all," says Shubham Agarwal of Quantsapp Private Limited.
Shubham Agarwal
History reveals shorter the time frame in investing more
challenging it becomes. Lots of traders, trade for living or want to make money
from intraday trading by deploying less margin but often end up losing it all.
It’s not a trading terminal you sit in front of, it’s a mirror
reflecting your own behavior and mostly you are fighting yourself.
A few critical changes have worked
wonders for me and my team and here are eight critical ones to achieve
success:
Relax the Ego: Trade with the Trend
Let’s think logically, how many times would a reversal in trend
happen? 10 percent or 15 percent right? Then why are we always
placing a bet for trend reversals?
The probability of success is not naturally in favor. The thrust of being able to catch the top/bottom often leaves back with the
significant loss of capital.
Trade the trend rather than contradicting the largest force
around i.e. Mr. Market.
Tweak your stop losses with stock
volatility:
Static trading disciplines have some pitfall, I’ll explain this
with an example. Let’s assume you have a strong money management discipline to
not lose more than 1 percent in each trade and that’s your fixed stop loss.
Did you know you should not be trading all stocks? Yes, you
heard it right. All stocks have different characteristics, and some have average volatility of 0.5 percent a day and some range to 5 percent average
volatility per day.
Trading stocks with five percent volatility with a 1
percent stop loss may be statistically un-viable and chances of you getting
triggered are quite high. You need to filter stocks that fit your money
management or tweak your money management to a variable depending on stocks
behaviour.
Greed: Short-term pullbacks within
overall trend:
The greed overrules when a small reversal in trend is visible in
a long-term trending stock. For instance, a stock which has been going down for
some time now witnessed a pullback for a couple of days and often to make money
from those short-term pullbacks investors gets trapped in bad quality stocks.
Recall your trading history, I’m sure there have been many.
Lose small:
I know the secret of your losses. Have you lost a large amount
of money in few trades? Yes, that’s a common mistake trader do. A bad money
management leads to large losses in a couple of trades.
As a trader, it’s important to lose small and gain big but often
it is reverse. Remember, you still have a probability of winning big if you
have chips but if you run out of chips, you are out of the game.
Patience:
Let me clarify, with patience I don’t mean holding on to a
losing trade. Instead, it’s all about making the most when you are right. The
market prices will reward you for your right research; don’t let it go for
small profits, trail stop losses to ride it to the maximum possible.
You need positive outliers to sustain the game which is
otherwise negatively skewed due to transaction charges, taxes, impact cost,
etc. The positive skew will come from gaining large in few trades.
Inverse Pyramiding:
Often investors average their losing trades also known as pyramiding.
Let’s take an example, what would you do if you have a cut in your hand a) seek
first aid and stop the bleeding b) cut your hand more at a different place?
Of course, it’s option a, but why do we create more cuts when we
know things are going wrong? Inverse pyramiding has worked well for me.
Buy a decent tranche at entry with a defined small stop loss and
reduce your cost by booking a few upwards and once comfortable stay with rest
of the quantity till you make most of the trend.
Respect when the market says, it’s not
your day today:
Knowing when not to trade can contribute big time to the PnL.
It’s not necessary to trade every day. Some days will be beyond your
understanding or beyond any rationality.
The market will indicate you that it’s a bad day for you with a
series of weird movements and stop losses. Shut the screen for the day and give
yourself a break.
Defined exits:
You cannot dig a well after the fire breaks out. Define your
exits before you enter in a trade, this will help you overcome your emotions
and behave rationally. Remember any loss beyond this defined point only and
only is the barometer of your emotions and not rationality.
source by: moneycontrol
Professional Advisory For Help And Support- AllianceResearch
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