I never laid down so much as a dollar bet in any casino. I
have absolutely no interest in backjack, craps, slot machines or any other
games of chance and I look down with disdain at the excited masses crowding the
cavernous Vegas gambling halls. But deep down, if I am honest with myself, I
have to admit that whenever I trade a lot I am just as much of a sucker as
every hopeless loser that gives up his hard earned money to Steve Wynn or
Sheldon Adelson
If you are constantly trading just for the sake of trading,
just for the rush of being “in the game”, just for the momentarily thrill of
being right you are gambling. You are trading without an edge, without any
solid information and are therefore completely vulnerable to the random
vagaries of price.
Towards the end of last year I decided to do something about
my toxic addiction and created two separate accounts - one for trades that
would only follow my trading plan - the other for all my trading/gambling
impulses. But before I share my experience with you allow me to define the
difference between a trade and a gamble. The key distinction is information.
The less information you posses the more likely the chances are that your trade
is gamble.
A techincal trader who only looks at the five minute chart
to gauge his support and resistance points is just gambling. On the other hand
a trader who looks through the hourly, daily, weekly and monthly support
points, carefully calculates Fib retracement positions and only acts when
multiple time frames confirm his analysis has a much greater chance of success.
Similarly a fundamental trader who mindlessly reacts to the latest economic
release without understanding the prior market expectations, the current price
flow and and countervailing information on the other currency in the pair is
also just gambling.
Notice the unifying theme? Like everything else in life
success in trading requires hard work and homework. There is no magic formula,
no simple 5 minutes per day method to make you money. In trading, working hard
is no guarantee of winning, but not working hard is an assurance of losing,
because trading at its core is a game of information and you must always be up
to date on what' s gong on in the market or become the sucker at the table.
Now back to my experiment. I subdivided my trading into two
accounts - one where I traded only calendar risk on a reactive basis with very
disciplined entries and exit rules and strict adherence to money management.
The other account was just for my whims and impulses. An interesting thing
occurred. My “trading plan” account which I traded far rarely and more
carefully became much more profitable and incurred much lower drawdowns.
Meanwhile the equity in my gambling account bounced up and down like a hopped
up rubber ball. Suddenly the thrill of “being in the game” wasn't so much fun.
Like a reformed smoker who appreciates the smell of fresh air, I was no longer
drawn to making impulsive trades. That's not completely true.
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