This is an article inspired by a member and close friend of
mine. He is someone who has been trading for over a decade and who has
struggled with the ups and downs of trading, like so many other traders. Here’s
a little background on him: He is a family man, recently unemployed and looking
to be his own boss so he can spend more time with his family and have the
lifestyle he’s always wanted. After recently losing his job, he was forced to
stop trading live and so he went back to demo trading only. He called me up
after about three months of demo trading to tell me what he had learned.
When I spoke with him, he recounted a truly inspiring
revelation that he had after taking a few months off from live trading and
switching back to demo. He told me that after nearly 16 years in the market and
trying to ‘figure it out’, he finally had his “Ah Ha” moment where everything
he had learned from me and from his own personal experience, finally came
together.
I asked him if I could use his experiences to write an
article for you guys, because I know many of you are still struggling and are
waiting for everything to “click” with your trading. Hopefully, the insight you
are about to learn from will help you have your own “Ah Ha” moment so you can
finally get on the track to profitable trading…
(The story below is his, I have paraphrased him and edited
it a bit, but this is his 1st person account…)
You don’t
need to trade a lot to make a lot of money.
I had always been trying to make a lot of money on small
accounts. I’d chuck 1k or 2k into a trading account and think I was going to
make 100k a year from that by the end of the year. LOL. Looking back, that kind
of thinking really does make me laugh.
Perhaps the most impactful lesson that I learned during my
three-month absence from live trading, was that I didn’t need to trade a lot to
make a lot of money. I was trading a 50K demo account during my absence, and I
only took two trades during that time. One trade was buying the GBPUSD which
netted me about 6k and the other was buying Gold, which netted me about 25k.
So, I made $31,000 in about three months (10k a month) trading only 2 times. I
had no losers, just two big winners. I don’t know about you, but I am pretty
happy with making $31,000 in 3 months time, for doing virtually no actual
‘work’ other than using my brain.
Now, I don’t have $50,000 real money to trade with,
unfortunately. But, that is OK, because I finally realized and experienced the
FACT that you don’t have to trade a lot to make a lot of money! Where have you
heard this before?! Probably from the same person I did … Nial Fuller.
How many articles have you read of Nial’s where he talks
about low-frequency trading or that over-trading is the death of most traders’
accounts? There’s a reason for this, it’s very, very true! You don’t realize it
when you’re caught up trying to make ‘a lot of money’ on a tiny account. You
get caught up over-trading and forcing trades, rather than letting trades come
to you.
Trading
strategy and mastering it, matters, a lot.
During my three-month demo trading odyssey, I was primarily
looking to trade pull backs, something Nial teaches and strongly emphasizes in
his trading course, something I’ve learned from him primarily, yet I never
really put into practice quite right.
The thing about pull backs, I finally realized, is that you
basically have to buy a market when it’s down and sell a market when it’s
up…both are very hard to do and counter-intuitive to do in the moment. It’s
easy to understand but hard to put into motion.
When a market is moving higher, you feel like you want to
buy it, and vice versa when it’s moving lower. The KEY is to look at the
context of the chart; is the market simply retracing higher within a downtrend?
If that is the case, then you should be looking to sell on that up-swing, even
though you may not feel like you want to! Sell when a market is up and buy when
it’s down.
Most of
the time, you should be doing nothing in the market
It’s hard to not care or think about your trades on a real
account, but on a demo account, you truly just don’t think about the trades as
much, and most of the time, this works to your advantage in dramatic fashion.
I literally didn’t even look at my Gold trade until I was
already up $19,000 dollars on it. Had that trade been real, I probably would
have already sabotaged it and been out with a tiny profit or a loss by that
point.
The point is, we need to detach from the markets more,
especially after we enter trades.
Set the trade up, do your due diligence, make sure it meets
your criteria and trading plan or strategy, set the stop loss (at least) and
possibly target, and just forget about the damn thing for a few days at least!
It took me YEARS, actually DECADES to be able to do this! Don’t let this be
you!
Bottom-line is; Not looking at your trades once you enter
them is probably the single greatest thing you can do to make money as a
trader. We are swing trading, not day-trading. Remember that!
Bankroll
matters.
In a recent article of Nial Fuller’s, he discussed some
things he would say to his former trading self from his current trading self,
having gained over a decade and a half of experience. One of the things that
hit me the most was how he learned he needed his bankroll to survive in the
markets. It seems obvious on the surface, but so many of us trade as if our
bankroll doesn’t matter. Then, when a good trade finally comes along, we have
little or no money left to take advantage of it.
This point was driven home for me during my three months of
demo trading. First off, having a 50k account to start with certainly made
things easier, as far as keeping my bankroll intact. That said, I also realized
that even though I had 50k to trade with, I could simply crank up the risk if I
wanted to, and potentially lose a lot of money very fast. So, yes, account size
has advantages, but if you don’t know how to preserve your trading capital, the
size of your account is irrelevant. Therefore, Nial is always saying that if
you can trade successfully on a small account you can do it on a big account
too. So, don’t worry if you have a small account and can’t trade the size you
want; work on the mechanics, on the process and then you will be able to use
that same approach as your account grows or if you find an investor.
Don’t be
in a trade just to be in a trade.
This was a lesson that really hit me after switching back to
demo trading for a few months. It was apparent that much of my struggles with
live trading were because I simply felt an urge to be in the market nearly all
the time. It was almost like a guilty pleasure; something I knew was wrong but
it felt good so I did it anyways. Of course, it felt good until I lost money,
which is the inevitable outcome of most trades taken for this reason.
After my demo trading success, I realized that I only had
taken a handful of trades over three months, and those trades led to large
gains. So, not only was I trading far less, I also made far more money, there
is indeed a connection and I believe in this case correlation does indicate
causation!
Patience
is what makes you money, but patience is not easy.
Being patient while trading a demo account seems to be far
easier than being patient on a live account. This is typically because when
you’re trading demo you simply ‘don’t care’ as much as when you’re trading
live, since there’s no real money on the line. When people go from a big 50k
demo account to a small real account, they feel an urge to build up that real
account fast, so they can trade the big size they were on the 50k demo. But,
this simply leads them to over-trade and over-leverage and blow out their
accounts. For this reason, it’s probably a good idea to open your demo account
with the same amount of money or close to the same as what you will trade with
live.
Failure
eventually became success
Finally, after many years of failing as a trader, I realized
that the reasons I was failing were things I had the ability to fix. Here is
how I fixed it:
I wrote down in detail, everything I was doing differently
as I traded my demo account. This included how I was feeling as I analyzed the
market each day, how I felt as I set up a trade, how I felt as I did nothing
and let the trade play out, the actual setups I took and how I managed them,
etc. This was basically a trading journal, and I suggest every trader creates
one. It doesn’t have to be anything fancy, so don’t over-think it. You can just
record your thoughts in a Word document or even write them in a notebook. Just make
a record or journal of your trades and your thoughts and feelings each day as
you interact with the market in any way, shape or form.
I stopped being in a rush to make money. My demo trading
success made me realize that the underlying issue behind why I was losing on my
real account and why most traders lose, is simply due to being in a rush to
make money. Trading is so difficult because psychologically, the more you want
and try to make money from the market, the less likely you are to do so. People
do well on demo accounts because their brain and the hormones it produces lead
to the type of interaction and behavior in the market that results in profits.
On live accounts, it’s typically the opposite. The reason why is because on a
live account, people are in rush to make money, whilst on a demo account, they
are just thinking of it as a ‘game’, since there’s no money involved.
So, really, if I could sum up what I learned from my success
on a demo account for 3 months, it’s to simply treat your live trading account
as if it’s game, and you are playing to win the game, not to make money! Making
money is simply a byproduct of playing the game well enough to win.
I could not have done any of this nor would I have had these
dramatic realizations had I not started studying the trading ideas and
philosophies taught by Nial Fuller on his blog and in his courses. I know that
probably sounds cliché to some of you, but it’s true. The main ideas Nial
teaches sound simple and effective, and they truly are, but it is our own flaws
and emotional miscues that make them so hard to follow. If you are having
trouble with your live account, I would suggest going back to a practice
account and start studying Nial’s teachings, until you finally have your own
“Ah Ha” moment.
PLEASE
LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW – I WOULD LIKE TO HEAR YOUR FEEDBACK 🙂