It appears not at bottom nor beginning of a trend but when market is significantly away from bottom.
Frequency - It appears in each and every bull market. Unless you properly learn to handle it, you will keep falling for it in every bull
(2/7) market !
Trend is your friend ie true but not all trends ! Consider all trends as your colleagues. Just like some colleagues becomes friends and others remain colleagues, few trends become our friends and majority needs to be observed for potential friendship opportunities
(3/7) alone !
“ I will get quickly out when trend ends “ is one of the biggest lie that we tell ourselves while falling for FOMO . Unless you have a properly back tested, forward tested with small capital & psychologically suitable trend following system, we wont exit at right
A thread based on Jesse Livermore Quotes and Trading Rules
*Do not average losses.
Even if based on scientifically proven edge most of us cant withstand the pressure of stocks declining as stocks usually decline much faster.
* When you double your capital learn to take some money out of it. You may need it for some rainy days !
*It takes time to make money. Get rich quick adventurers will die poor.
*Money cannot be made consistently trading in stocks every day or every week during the year.
Have a draw down plan. When draw down threshold hits ( eg-6% per month ) Stop trading for 2 weeks to 1 month and then comeback. The current market may not be suitable for your strategy
Year after year majority of mutual fund managers are fooling innocent retailers.
S&P Dow Jones Indices compiles a report on active fund performance versus benchmarks over various periods, from 1 to 10 years.
The report for December 2019 , the latest available, showed that only 35% of large-cap funds managed to beat their benchmark indices over the last 10 years.
souce- livemint
Their logic is simple
If you made money, we are the reason
If you lose money feel free to chose from our laundry list of excuses for why it was a difficult and why next year will surely be different.
A team of psychologists in Berlin studied violin students. Specifically, they studied their practice habits. All the violinists had begun playing at roughly five years of age with similar practice times.
However, at age eight, practice times began to diverge. By age twenty, the elite performers averaged more than 10,000 hours of practice each, while the less able performers had only 4,000 hours of practice.
The psychologists found a direct statistical relationship
between hours of practice and achievement. No shortcuts. The elite had more than double the practice hours of the less capable performers.