Stock Exchange: Do You Start The Day With A Trading Plan?

 | Jun 08, 2018 02:04AM ET

The Stock Exchange is all about trading. Each week we do the following:

  • Discuss an important issue for traders;
  • highlight several technical trading methods, including current ideas;
  • feature advice from top traders and writers; and,
  • provide a few (minority) reactions from fundamental analysts.

We also have some fun. We welcome comments, links, and ideas to help us improve this resource for traders. If you have some ideas, please join in!

Review: What Are Your Odds of Trading Success?

Our previous Stock Exchange asked the question: What Are Your Odds of Trading Success? We acknowledged that trading is challenging, and many people shouldn’t even try it. The success rate is very low. However, if you’re willing to put in the time, you can be successful.

This Week: Do You Start The Day With A Trading Plan?

According to infamous boxer, Mike Tyson:

Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face.

And while Muhammad Ali is still the greatest, Mike Tyson has a good point. We can start every trading day with a specific plan in mind, but the market can throw some wild punches that create the need to adjust.

For example, the highly-respected and always fascinating trader and author, Dr. Brett Steenbarger wrote earlier this week about the importance of adjusting your trading plan based on market conditions:

Today, the two trades I had that didn’t work out came close to my targets, but failed… According to my stats, the SPY volume in the afternoon was running at about half the expectable level for that time of day. On normal days, we might get 60,000 contracts traded in 25 minutes’ time. Today it took more than an hour. Everything slowed down. Except for my expectations.

Market participation changes daily, and the balance of buyers and sellers changes daily. Our job is to recognize and adjust.

As another example of how to adjust your trading plan throughout the course of the trading day, an excellent article from the SMB Training Blog explains how to adjust your playbook throughout the course of the day to improve your success, in the same way the NBA’s Golden State Warriors adjust at half time to improve their success.

We also have learned to adjust our own trading plays depending on market conditions. For example, our stop orders are adjusted depending on market volatility to reduce the chances of getting stopped out at inopportune times (see here).

Model Performance:

Per reader feedback, we’re continuing to share the performance of our trading models, as shown in the following table:

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