Psychology EBook-2024-03-04T00-45-29.574Z
Psychology EBook-2024-03-04T00-45-29.574Z
Psychology EBook-2024-03-04T00-45-29.574Z
Chapter 1: Confidence
This is where it all started for me years ago. I was just a young kid
with $5,000 and a dream to make it big with trading. Years later, we
did make it big, but it was not without some major set backs and
lessons I wish I had known prior. I am going to lay them all out here.
Trading with a small account is tough, do not let anyone tell
you differently. While it is very possible to hit big and turn a little
into a lot, this is not the mindset I want you having. Small account
trading should be used to build your skills, find your system, and
learn to manage risk with less at stake. If you cannot manage
$5,000, I promise you cannot manage $50,000. This is a common
misconception traders have, more money does not make you a
better trader, but learning how to trade with less will certainly make
you a better trader when you have earned the right to trade with
$50,000.
20% of capital MAX used for any trade: $5,000 x .20 = $800 / trade
2-5% max account RISK / trade: $5,000 account x $800 used x 30%
stop loss = $250 MAX risk / trade (You can certainly use less too)
Start with 1 contract & EARN YOUR SIZE up. Reevaluate every
month
Stick to a basket of stocks: SPY, QQQ, AAPL, AMD, AMZN are a few
good ones to start
Use this time to build discipline & trust in your system: The goal with
a small account is not to make a bunch of money, but build a skill
set and system that will later. That is the key my friends
Ditch the daily goal: Daily goals are HORRIBLE for traders
trying to grow a small account, or any traders at all. They offer no
real benefit. Think about it, a daily goal sets an imaginary number
that you must hit to feel content with your trading day. This puts the
full focus on the money, exactly what we DON’T want to do as
traders. It makes us pull out of winners early in order to secure a
‘daily goal.’ It makes us over trade and force trades in order to
secure a ‘daily goal’ (typically resulting in losses). It makes us trade
to hit a number vs trading for principal and system which is what will
make us profitable in the long term. Ditch the daily goal and shift
your goals to process and principal based goals. Long term money-
based goals are fine, but not daily. Long term vision.
Chapter 4: Bouncing back after a huge loss
This one is tough. Losses hurt, but bigger than expected losses can
be agonizing. We have all been there or will be there at some point
in our trading career. I certainly have many times, and I have
learned valuable (and painful) lessons each time.
You need to first remember you are not alone. Losses are a
part of this game and are often not talked about. You and I are going
to lose trades and a lot of them. Our job is to be the BEST loser. The
best loser wins this game. The pain of a big loss hurts, but there is
beauty in this. You need to use this as a pivot point. Screenshot the
loss, write it down, acknowledge and accept it. Use the loss / losses
as fuel. The only way we move past this is acceptance and
accountability.
The bad news: It is going to be hard. You have felt it. You are
feeling it. Your back is against the wall. You went through, are going
through, or are going to go through a tough road to get to that point
of consistently making money.
The good news: You can. You will. All the hardships, losses,
frustrations you experienced mold you into exactly who you need to
be. I remember telling myself every single day ‘There is NO PLAN
B’, ‘I want this more than I want to breathe’, ‘I HAVE to become a
profitable trader no matter what.’ I did not give myself a choice to
find success and I did not care about a timeline. That is the attitude
it is going to take to win, and it is going to change your life forever. It
is similar to fitness where you show up every day for a while and see
no results, but if you hit it long enough, you become unrecognizable
in every way. The changes and growth you are going to see mentally
from committing to your trading success and going to spread to
every area of your life. This process is not just about becoming a
disciplined trader, but a disciplined and successful person. This
was the mindset that always got me through the ‘I want to quit’
times. It is NOT an option. Stay strong.
A game: Our A game refers to the things we are best at. If you
are good at identifying entries and exits, finding the bottoms with
minimal draw down and catching tops before the reversal comes,
you would put that in your A game. But in the process of that, you
don’t hold for the whole move, you typically sell early and do not
follow your plan, we put that in the B game.
When it is all said and done, our job as traders is to become the
best loser possible. Embrace the struggle that comes with the
learning curve. Accept that in order to build trading psychology, you
must have a solid system to build on. I hope this guide has put you
one step closer to your goals and gives you something to come back
to / lean on in challenging times. You can do it. “If others can, so can
I.” No plan B. Be sure to join me every morning M-F at 8:30am ET
on my Instagram live (@jduntrades) for my daily walk through, watch
list, and to get ready for the trading day. Consistency is the key to
success. God bless.