Stock Exchange: What Do Winning Traders Have In Common?

 | Jul 20, 2018 02:15AM 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!

h3 Review: What Motivates Traders to Trade? /h3

Our previous Stock Exchange asked the question: What Motivates Traders to Trade? Trading (which is shorter-term and more active in nature) as opposed to investing (which is longer-term and generally less active) is a challenging endeavor that endures many casualties. We referenced information sources on the difficulties in finding success as a trader, and encouraged market participants to be disciplined.

h3 This Week: What Do Winning Traders Have In Common?/h3

Numbers 13, 17 and 18 are among our favorites on this list:

13. Most new traders quit when they realized how much work is involved in trading successfully.

17. They are not willing to pay the tuition to learn to trade in time, study, and losing trades.

18. They are crushed by the learning curve that they do not work hard enough to get through.

The finale of this list is:

“Traders don’t survive without perseverance. If one thing is “The Holy Grail” of trading it’s perseverance.”

If you’re not exactly sure what we mean by perseverance, Turtle Trader provides some excellent perspective on what it takes to be “amazingly good” at something. He writes:

One of my favorite podcast interviews over the last 6 years is with Swedish psychologist Anders Ericsson (BS:ERICAs) Ericsson (ep. 437 ). He goes to the heart of not only what it means to be human, but what it means to be a human who achieves:

“Why are some people so amazingly good at what they do? Anywhere you look, from competitive sports and musical performance to science, medicine, and business, there always seem to be a few exceptional sorts who dazzle us with what they can do and how well they do it. And when we are confronted with such an exceptional person, we naturally tend to conclude that this person was born with something a little extra. “He is so gifted,” we say, or, “She has a real gift.” But… it is not the gift that people usually assume it to be, and it is even more powerful than we imagine. Most importantly, it is a gift that every one of us is born with and can, with the right approach, take advantage of.”

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Deliberate practice is the gift.

That’s the only secret.

That said, most people disagree with Ericsson. They disagree with deliberate practice. They think it’s in the DNA that we are born with it. They cite child prodigies or mention John Lennon and Paul McCartney. Next they talk about athletic stars.

They are dead wrong. Just excuses.

Success is not innate. You are not born with talent.

Anything can be learned including GREAT trading.

For us, our trading models were developed using 20 years of data—first training and then out-of-sample testing. The real-time period is post learning curve. For example, Holmes (one of our models) had over 40,000 possible choices in the training period and 30,000 in the OOS phase. That is a lot of experience and “perseverance.”

h3 Model Performance:/h3

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