Tag Archive for 'Stocks'

Trading: Method vs. Emotions

I'm striving for this: true calm

From the scripture of Mark Douglas in The Disciplined Trader:

As a result, I sincerely feel that success in trading is 80 percent psychological and 20 percent one’s methodology, be it fundamental or technical. For example, you can have a mediocre knowledge of fundamental and technical information, and if you are in psychological control, you can make money. Conversely, you may have a great system, one that you have tested and has performed well for a long period of time, yet if the psychological control is not there, you will be the loser.

Steps I’ve recently taken to increase my mental control (since we all seem to default to focusing on technique):
  • Meditation, both “empty your mind” and “visioning”.  I took a quick $7 lesson from a local mind+body shop.  Still working at implementing it daily.
  • Monitor/schedule my sleep.  A Tim Ferriss trick is to use a timer rather then alarm for sleeping so I am focusing on my sleep deposit/debt.  This works better if I don’t have a required wake time for a job (I don’t).  Lack of sleep causes me to be more moody and thus more emotional.  Goal is eight hours, so I often start “going to bed” at T minus nine hours.
  • Monitor/schedule my eating.  Food is the most powerful drug we take multiple times a day (unless you live in a hospital I guess).  Smaller meals more often keeps my blood sugar (the brain’s food) more level and thus my mood (emotional state).  I also stay away from sugar and manufactured carbs which spike the blood sugar (but not yet conquered caffeine).  The theory and application of this is found in The Zone Diet, which is designed to keep the body/mind “in the zone” of optimum energy by controlling what you eat.
  • Don’t trade when I’m focused on finances.  If I need to pay next months bills with my "planned winnings” then I’ll trade from emotion, rather then if the money has no near-term impact on my lifestyle.  Even once trading becomes my only income my plan has me withdrawing once-for-the-next-six-months and eventually to once-for-the-next-year so my lifestyle is unaffected by my day to day market success.
  • Plan, plan, and more sticking to the plan.  How many times will I trade a month?  How many times will I practice in a month?  How much cash will I use each time?  How many trades in a row loss will cause a “real money hold” period? What charts will I use? What stocks will I use?  When do I get out of the trade “when it’s not working” and “when it’s working”?  What do I consider “it’s not working”… and on and on.  The more details I have documented and the more I review it… the more I tend to be less emotional on entry and exit of a trade.
Image used with Creative Commons License from Jeff Power’s on Flickr

QCharts 6.0 Experiences

stock charting computer with 4 monitors QCharts is my stock charting program of choice.  I don’t use it for actual trading, just for technical analysis and historical research.  I believe it’s the best out there in terms of flexibility and feature set.  It’s defiantly not the fastest, coolest, or cheapest out there, but it gets the job done.

Initial setup: (picture here) I have a year-old $500 HP/Compaq from Best Buy.  Single AMD proc, single core (a year ago on QCharts 5.x there was no multi-threading so you wanted the fastest processor, not multi-cores).  Since then I’ve added:

  • Bumped up to 3GB of RAM
  • Added a GeForce 7300 GT PCIe to replace mobo video (dual monitor capable)
  • Added a GeForce 6200 PCI (dual monitor capable)
  • Plugged in 4 21″ Samsung SyncMaster 204B at 1600×1200.  Turned them portrait to increase the vertical space and allow seeing all 4 in my field of vision (and fit them on the desk).  Also great for web surfing.
  • Added 2nd Hard Drive for storing data and pagefile
  • Wiped 1st Hard Drive and installed Vista Business x64
  • Installed 6.0.2 as my main QCharts (with 5.x still as a backup, mostly for 233 chart historical research and feature comparison)

This setup aught to show you that you don’t have to spend $3-5k for a “stock computer setup”.  Just get multiple video cards (preferably by the same manufacture) and plug them in.  We’ve got a monitoring workstation at work with 5-6 monitors and just keep shoving in the PCI graphic cards.  Vista/XP will do the rest.

Issues with this setup

  • Vista is MUCH slower in video refreshes, even with Aero turned off.  Maybe this is NVIDIA’s driver (using 12/2007). It’s laggy, but still useable.
  • Not sure if it’s Vista, or the fact I’m running x64, but QCharts crashes on exit.  I run it in XP SP2 compatibility mode
  • Running Aero not only slows it down, but crashes the video driver (likely from running two cards, or maybe the portrait mode enabled on all 4)
  • Vista doesn’t yet have nView Desktop Manager (due out this spring)
  • To using charting during US trading hours (something I don’t normally do) really needs a newer dual core CPU.  With 200 ticker symbols on 6.0.2 I’m 50-100% CPU during day w/o doing anything but “watching”.

SBUX

In researching Starbucks overseas, I googled onto these pictures of Starbucks around the world.

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