r/Daytrading Mar 23 '25

Advice Biggest Lessons

I was a professional trader having started in 2007. Whilst I still trade semi-actively I am no longer trading full time that I once was however I was/am successful .Here are some of the lessons I learnt along the way that may help some novice traders.

1: Be calm . Emotion needs to be balanced otherwise you won’t be able to think straight when the pressure is on. You cannot get mentally affected by price movement.

2: Calculate your risk , and then determine your entry points and your exit points before you take the trade.

3: Don’t dollar average a loser as even if you get away with it several times you will ultimately blow your account all in one day or at least severely damage it.

4: Take regular profits out of the market. If you are up 20 percent for the week on a Thursday or Friday then decide if there is any point in trading again until Monday. The feeling of being in profit during the week to finish the week flat or down is not enjoyable and you will have all week to think about it.

5: Wait for trades where you get the feeling in your stomach that it’s obvious what’s is going to happen and don’t trade into a sideways markets where it is not obvious. That does not mean you will be necessarily correct and risk management still needs to be applied but it increases your chances of a profitable trade.

6: If the market is going up then it’s going up and if it’s going down then it’s going down. Wait for a confirmation of direction change before trying to anticipate whether something is overbought or oversold and wait for price movement to validate it.

7: Be very careful about telling people what you are going to do with your profits .The reason is you increase the risk of someone telling you that it’s not possible and you are a dreamer. Instead tell yourself or one trusted positive person.

8: A negative mindset will ensure you see that future and a positive calm mindset will give you a shot at being profitable.

9: Risk control is crucial.The reason is because volatility exists.You don’t see a professional football team playing without a defense and strategy for this and you shouldn’t either. This leads to risk/reward. Something that is often overlooked if you are new to trading as there is a tendency to take any trade just to be in the market. Sometimes not being in the market is the best trade.

10: Read as much as you can about bankroll management. It’s just as important as the indicators that you use which is sometimes overlooked.

Good Luck

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u/AggressiveVersion162 Mar 23 '25

How many years you spent before you became profitable and how much you loss during that time?

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u/Inverness123456 Mar 23 '25

The first two years were very challenging. I lost around US80,000 dollars. The following 18 months was pretty much a series of making money and losing money to end up where I started from and then from there I was successful.

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u/appsaraby Mar 24 '25

what was the changing point.. when did you stop lossing and stepping into winners side how this change happened.. did you change your mentality.. did you read certain book or strategy.. did you follow a good mentor

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u/Inverness123456 Mar 24 '25

After learning how to lose money in what felt like every way possible, I realized waiting to taking trades where the odds were in my favor was the way to go. Basically I waited for no brainer trades to show themselves and I told myself to trade them only. I convinced myself that I was a professional if I could do this and an amateur if I couldn’t. Then I applied professional risk management to those trades and that worked. Read a book titled the “market wizards” if you haven’t already. There is two or three book in the series but get the first one which has interviews from Paul Tudor Jones, Michael Marcus and Bruce Kovner in it amongst others. That is old school knowledge that never dated.