Seven Deadly Trading Mistakes - Part Six
If you've been following these lessons through so far, you might
by now be wondering if this trading thing is really worth it.
What with all the planning, testing, and continued effort, it
perhaps seems much more complicated than you first thought.
Mistake Number Six - Overcomplicating It
It's easy to get caught up in the details, but if we take a step
back for a moment, trading really need not be complicated at
all. Finding a strategy to work with can take as long or short a
time as you like - there are plenty available off the shelf
(including within my own course, naturally!) Formalising that
strategy into a written personal trading plan is something that
requires only a couple of hours of time up front - after that it
can be refined and added to as you go along.
So already we see that very quickly we can get to the stage
where we are ready to begin simulated or "paper" trading. And
it's at this stage where lots of traders really start to
overcomplicate matters.
If you remember back a few weeks ago in the first lesson, I
talked about strategy jumping. A close relative of that
particular problem, is strategy morphing. The cycle is very
similar indeed. The trader starts trading their plan with all
good intentions. Things may or may not go well straight away,
but sooner or later as the markets behaviour ebbs and flows with
and against the strategy's strengths and weaknesses, losing
trades will inevitably occur.
At this point, the strategy-morpher gets scared. They don't like
to give money back to the market, so they decide to try and
modify the system to filter out trades like that last losing
one. They begin to add indicators to charts, coming up with new
ever more convoluted combinations, furiously testing to see what
cuts out the most bad signals whilst leaving in place the good
ones. A few times round this loop and their chart starts to
resemble something a siezemologist might be more used to seeing
than a price chart!
I'm not saying that modifying and testing of new systems and
ideas isn't valid, but when it's done at the expense of trading
an already profitable system, the trader ends up chasing his own
tail, and loses out in the long run.
Remember that every strategy will have losing trades. When those
losses are within the normal expectations of the system, there
is no need to start fiddling. Stick with it and as long as the
system has positive expectancy, the law of averages will see you
through those drawdown periods and you will make money. Paper
trading the system thoroughly beforehand will give you the faith
in the setups to be able to do this.
Markets are complicated, but trading them need not be. Simple
really is the best policy. A simple system makes for easier to
spot entries and exits, a less stressful trading day, and
consequently a less stressed and more profitable trader. Almost
all of the successful traders I know have found this out the
hard way, by trying the complicated route first.
Action: To avoid mistake number six, you actually need to do
*less* work. Put in a little effort up front in the planning
stages, and then relax and just follow your plan to the letter.
Thinking too much can damage your trading, not to mention your
stress levels!