Trading Lesson of the Week

Check back weekly for another free trading lesson:

Emotion is the Trader's Enemy

In This Week’s Issue:

  • Upcoming Events – April Webinars
  • Market Outlook – Inflation Concerns Still Weigh on Market
  • This Week’s Market Minutes video – How to Profit from a Stock Market Crash
  • Trader Training – Emotion is the Trader’s Enemy
  • Strategy – Cannabis Sector Hot

 

Upcoming Events – Education Webinars in April

Simple Strategies to Find Hot Stocks and Avoid Stock Market Crashes

Video Replay Click Here - https://youtu.be/Lz4ZTWefX3c

 

Day and Swing Trading for Full or Part Time Income

Wednesday, April 10, 2024 6 PM PT - Register

 

How to Invest in the Stock Market Successfully

Thursday, April 11, 2024 6 PM PT - Register

 

How Stockscores Tools and Education Can Help You Make Stock Market Profits

Saturday, April 13, 2024 10:00 AM - Register

 

REGISTER ONLINE – Click Here

https://www.stockscores.com/trader-training/upcoming-events/

 

Market Outlook – Inflation Concerns Still Weigh on Market

Stocks are in upward trends but still lack widespread bullishness as investors remain concerned about inflation and its effect on interest rates. We see the bond market unable to make gains and push expectations for lower interest rates to reality. Until the bond market can break the three month downward trend, remain very selective with what stocks you consider and focus on Alpha stocks, those trading with abnormal price and volume activity. Gold, Energy, Cannabis and AI stocks are the hot sectors that speculators are willing to act on.

 

This Week’s Market Minutes video – How to Profit from a Stock Market Crash

The stock market crashed lower on Thursday but some stocks made good gains. This week, I show you what to look for when buying during market weakness. Then, we look at the stock, bond, commodity, and currency markets to figure out what their future direction is. Finally, the trade of the week on XXII.

Click here to watch this week's video

https://youtu.be/TwzfwwInfT0

 

Commentary – Emotion is the Trader’s Enemy

Emotion is the enemy of every trader.

Our emotional attachment to money is what causes us to lose our discipline, to take big losses, to not let our strong and profitable trades run higher. It causes us to own too many stocks in one sector or fall in love with a stock that will only hurt us. Letting emotion in to our trading decisions is a fast way to insomnia.

The perception is that the stock market is too risky, many investors don't like the potential for a sharp sell off that can destroy their portfolio in a very short time period. The collapse of the stock market in 2008 has given many a form of post-traumatic stress disorder, leaving them on the sidelines when it has not made sense to do so.

The stock market may be volatile at times but that is not what determines risk. Risk is how you respond to the volatility, how you manage the potential size of your losses. The stock market is not risky, the people that play it are. It is how you deal with price volatility that determines risk.

If you want to sleep well while invested in stocks, you need to have a plan for managing risk. The notion that you can buy some "good" companies and forget about them is outdated and reckless.

Here are my essentials to being invested in the stocks and sleeping well:

Plan to lose. When you buy a stock, know the price level where the stock market will have proven you wrong. Learn how to determine where a stock's support price is and if the stock closes below that level, realize that the market is telling you that something is probably wrong at the company. Get out.

Know your tolerance for risk. How much are you willing to lose on any one stock trade? If you risk more than this amount, you will get emotional. Take the difference between the entry price and the stop loss price and divide that in to your risk tolerance to determine how many shares to buy. If you are buying a stock at $10 with a stop loss point at $9 and you are willing to lose $500 on any one trade then you should buy 500 shares.

Don't obsess. You don't need to watch your stocks constantly, if you are position trading then only look at the once a day or even once a week. You only need to check to see if your stock has given an exit signal, obsessing over every gyration will make you emotional and lead you to make mistakes.

Have a written plan. You must write down your trading rules. When will you buy, when will you sell, how will you manage risk and how will you review your positions. Keep the plan simple but concise enough that there is no room for interpretation.

Stick to your plan. Your plan should be based on strategies that you have tested and believe in. Deviating from the plan means you are going in to areas that have not been tested and that puts you closer to being a gambler. Gambling traders may win in the short term but in the long term they lose.

Remember that trading stocks is as risky as you make it. Not having a plan with rules for limiting the size of your losses leaves you exposed to big losses if the market corrects sharply. With loss limits and discipline, you should never be the victim of a major market correction.

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