Focus on the process of trading, rather than the outcome

I dont know who needs to hear this, but too many traders these days focus too much on how much they are going to win/lose on a trade, rather than focusing on getting the process right. On this thread I will explain what I mean so please feel free to contribute.

J
@josiah_edem - 6 days ago

The Process

When I say focus on the process, I mean focus on executing your trading strategy flawlesly without any deviation. When you have a good trading strategy, you shouldn't have to think before executing it, trade execution should come without hesitation or doubt.

If you have an objective entry trigger like bullish/bearish engufing on a 15-minute time frame, then you shouldnt have to think before entering the market once you see it.

For me once I see my entry trigger I take the trade and iI dont flinch when I see price moving against me. I always set my stop loss at least 10 pips away from my entry but basically i set the stop where the stop needs to be.

If the market conditions for the day require me setting a 20 pip stop loss, I set it even if it means reducing my lot size to manage my risk.

Before entering a trade, the question I always ask myself is am I following my strategy or am I deviating? And in trading you need to be hinest with yourself, If I am deviating, I quickly retrace my steps.

To be able to have confidence in the process, you need to backtest it over a period of time to be sure it has worked in the past.

Most new traders are overwhelmed at the thought of back testing, but a simpler way to check if a pricess has worked in the past is just by viewing historical charts. TradingView is a good platform for looking at historical charts and seeing how your process/strategy would have fared on past price action.

J
@josiah_edem - 5 days ago

The Outcome (Nothing Works All the Time)

No process has 100% effiiency, so nothing works all the time. To be a profitable trader you only need a process with at least a 20-35% win rate.

The idea is to keep your losses small and your winners big (the best loser wins). So, everyday when you enter a trade, do not expect to win, traders are never 100% certain, they just make an educated guess.

So for me, whenever I am in a winning trade, I dont close out early, I ride my winners. I only exit when I begin to see consecutive opposite candles forming. This (riding your winners) is the only way to remain profitable over time.

There is a psychology behind riding your winners because fear will try to make you exit early but to what I do is I open several trades then take some profit early and leave the rest to run.

J
@josiah_edem - 5 days ago

Celebrate Your Losses

Your reaction to loss is what will determine if you will be in this game for long. I traded for ,amy years taing losses the wrong way. I would always try to recover immediately or I would switch bias 9if i was long, I would switch to short and vice versa).

I always kept losing money and being dribbled by the market until my mentor told me never to chase losses. My solution was simple, after a loss, I withdraw the money and go for a drink.

Yes! I celebrate my loss with a drink, the reason for this somewhat absurd reaction to a loss is this: I am celebrating the fact that I was able to stick to my process/strategy even though the coutcome was not what I expected.

Y
@yokoyi - 4 days ago

I think he is saying we should always celebrate our ability to stick to our strategy after every days trade, even if the outome is a loss.

Y
@yokoyi - 2 days ago
Quoted - yokoyi

I think he is saying we should always celebrate our ability to stick to our strategy after every days trade, even if the outome is a loss.

I recorded consecutive losses on friday and today monday but I didnt feel bad because I was simpy following my process/strategy. I am wise enough to understand that nothing works all the time.

J
@jay_malema - 16 hours ago

Even the best strategies fail more than 50% of the time, so yea we should expect some losses but not get discouraged and lose confidence in the process.