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According to my observation, the most typical characteristics of people who lose money are: carrying orders during floating losses + asking people everywhere what they think + obsessing about tomorrow's rise and fall. If you are outside the market and have no orders, you only need to wait patiently for the market to stabilize, and you will not care about these meaningless issues. If you hold a short position that has already made a profit, the current price has already left your cost zone. You only need to hold it with peace of mind and will not ask these questions. Therefore, it is only possible that your extra sheets are trapped and you don’t know what to do, so you ask these questions to seek psychological comfort. Futures trading is speculation, and speculation requires immediate feedback. After you enter the market, whether your order makes or loses money within a period of time is more important than anyone else's opinion.
If your order is profitable on the day it is entered, you can pull the stop loss to the cost line and then do not process the order. If your order enters the market and it loses money, you have to deal with the order and either leave it or reduce your position, instead of guessing how much more you can lose or whether there is a possibility of getting your money back. Before entering the market, you may want to ask other people's opinions, but after entering the market, no one's opinion is important. What is important is the market's opinion. The market's opinion tells you through the profit and loss of your account. If you If you can't make a profit on the day of entry, you have to deal with the position, instead of taking a floating loss + asking others what they think + hoping to make it back tomorrow.
After entering the market, when your order is profitable and your profits are getting more and more every day, it doesn't matter what others think, the market has already told you. In the same way, when you have a floating loss list and are losing more and more every day, it makes no sense for others to tell you when you can no longer fall. After you open a position, what the market tells you is the most important. You should listen to the results the market tells you, not what anyone else tells you. Therefore, after opening a normal transaction, you do not need to ask anyone's opinion or opinion. What is important is what the market tells you and how you respond to what the market tells you.
For this type of traders who particularly like to carry orders, I have only one suggestion: If the orders entered on the same day do not make a profit before the market closes in the afternoon, stop the loss point, and the losing orders will not be overnight. Also for those who like to hunt for tops and buy bottoms, there is a similar suggestion: when buying the bottom, stop the loss when a new low is reached, and then wait for the decline to continue to stabilize, and then you can look for the next opportunity to buy the bottom, instead of just lying there after buying the bottom. Carrying it to death. I define my own trading as speculation, so I pay special attention to immediate feedback. After my order is entered, if the market does not give me the feedback I want that day, then I will come out first. If the market gives me good positive feedback that day, , then I will stop the loss and protect the capital, and I will not hold on. This is a trading habit to avoid big losses.
According to my observation, the most typical characteristics of people who lose money are: carrying orders during floating losses + asking people everywhere what they think + obsessing about tomorrow's rise and fall. If you are outside the market and have no orders, you only need to wait patiently for the market to stabilize, and you will not care about these meaningless issues. If you hold a short position that has already made a profit, the current price has already left your cost zone. You only need to hold it with peace of mind and will not ask these questions. Therefore, it is only possible that your extra sheets are trapped and you don’t know what to do, so you ask these questions to seek psychological comfort. Futures trading is speculation, and speculation requires immediate feedback. After you enter the market, whether your order makes or loses money within a period of time is more important than anyone else's opinion.
If your order is profitable on the day it is entered, you can pull the stop loss to the cost line and then do not process the order. If your order enters the market and it loses money, you have to deal with the order and either leave it or reduce your position, instead of guessing how much more you can lose or whether there is a possibility of getting your money back. Before entering the market, you may want to ask other people's opinions, but after entering the market, no one's opinion is important. What is important is the market's opinion. The market's opinion tells you through the profit and loss of your account. If you If you can't make a profit on the day of entry, you have to deal with the position, instead of taking a floating loss + asking others what they think + hoping to make it back tomorrow.
After entering the market, when your order is profitable and your profits are getting more and more every day, it doesn't matter what others think, the market has already told you. In the same way, when you have a floating loss list and are losing more and more every day, it makes no sense for others to tell you when you can no longer fall. After you open a position, what the market tells you is the most important. You should listen to the results the market tells you, not what anyone else tells you. Therefore, after opening a normal transaction, you do not need to ask anyone's opinion or opinion. What is important is what the market tells you and how you respond to what the market tells you.
For this type of traders who particularly like to carry orders, I have only one suggestion: If the orders entered on the same day do not make a profit before the market closes in the afternoon, stop the loss point, and the losing orders will not be overnight. Also for those who like to hunt for tops and buy bottoms, there is a similar suggestion: when buying the bottom, stop the loss when a new low is reached, and then wait for the decline to continue to stabilize, and then you can look for the next opportunity to buy the bottom, instead of just lying there after buying the bottom. Carrying it to death. I define my own trading as speculation, so I pay special attention to immediate feedback. After my order is entered, if the market does not give me the feedback I want that day, then I will come out first. If the market gives me good positive feedback that day, , then I will stop the loss and protect the capital, and I will not hold on. This is a trading habit to avoid big losses.
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