Trading
Futures Course
PART
1 - The Mental Game. Most traders believe that correct trading
patterns or setups are the ultimate key to success. Lewis strongly disagrees!
Knowing yourself first is more important. In Part 1, Lewis will teach
you how to identify the proper trading style that is best suited to
your personality and how to take advantage of your innate style to gain
insight into your trading and improve your results. You will then learn
how to use this knowledge and apply it in the upcoming weeks' lessons.
PART 2 - The Trend. One of the toughest things traders
encounter is how to identify if today is a trend day or a range-bound
day. Knowing how to trade in these two very different environments is
a major key to most professionals' success. In Part 2, Lewis will show
you how he identifies these two distinct trading environments and how
you can exploit characteristics of each.
PART 3 - Executing - Part I. Building upon the first
two weeks' lessons, in Part 3 you will learn where to enter, when to
exit, and where to place your stops in the S&P and Nasdaq 100 futures.
You will also be taught when and how to scale into and scale out of
a position, and how to properly evaluate the risks vs. rewards before
entering a position.
PART 4 - Executing - Part II. In Part 4, Lewis will
teach you how to read daily and intraday charts, how to exactly pinpoint
support and resistance areas, and how to trade pivots and breakouts.
Also, as an added bonus, Lewis will show you how to determine a "false
breakout" vs. "the real thing." Not only will you be
able to apply this knowledge to stock index futures trading, but you
will also be able to apply it to other major markets as well. Finally,
at the end of this lesson, you will learn how to trade economic events,
including the release of significant reports such as PPI, CPI, and key
employment reports.
PART 5 - Executing - Part III. In Part 5, Lewis will
share with you how he uses stocks to foretell the futures markets and
how he uses futures to foretell the movement of key stocks. Also, Lewis
will teach you the best momentum and sentiment indicators he uses to
enter and exit the markets.
PART 6 - Trading The Nasdaq 100. A special focus on
the Nasdaq 100 futures market. You will learn how this volatile index
differs from the other stock index futures and specific strategies for
trading it.
Dear Trader,
Welcome to seven week trading course!
To trade effectively, you must first have a plan, laying out a strategy
for the upcoming trading day. Your plan should encompass your mental
preparation, your technical analysis of the market, entry and exit points,
and the nature of the market, itself.
In this Seven-Part Course, I'll lead you through the highlights of devising
a plan to trade. Our focus is on Stock Index Futures - in particular,
S&Ps and NASDAQ - but many of these lessons can be applied to any
market. My goal is to help you - whether a novice or an experienced
trader - to trade better by preparing better.
In Part 1, we examine the first step in devising a plan - preparing
mentally for the trading day. You can't just start trading without mental
preparation any more than a professional football player could just
suit up and go out on the field. This mental preparation underscores
what I consider to be the first requirement of trading - discipline.
Discipline is what enables you to devise a trading plan, execute that
plan and stick to it when things don't go your way. With a little discipline,
you may have a little success. With more discipline, your successes
will be more frequent and more consistent, and a totally disciplined
trader will have the best opportunities of all.
In Part 2, we'll examine the personality of the market. In order to
devise a trading plan, you must know, for example, if you're in a trending
market or a range-bound one. I'll share some hints and advice on how
to tell the kind of market you're trading - and how to learn from your
mistakes.
In Part 3, we'll look at trade execution with entry and exit points
and stop-order placement. We'll discuss risk and reward, dealing with
losses - and wins, and how to keep your focus when everyone else in
the market is losing theirs.
In Part 4, we'll go a little deeper, looking at false signals and breakouts.
I'll share my advice on when it's best to be on the sidelines, and when
- and why - it is important to vary your trading size and your stop-order
placement without increasing your overall risk.
In Part 5, we'll examine how to use stocks and other indicators to help
you trade futures. Traders should use every tool at their disposal to
improve their performance. We'll discuss some of our favorites.
In Part 6, we'll look at trading the NASDAQ, a high-octane market that's
dominated by the tech-sector and has been known to make some pretty
wild moves in a day.
THE
MENTAL GAME
Trading is a mental game. The best trading system, the most accurate
technical analysis, the best online order-entry system, and the fastest
Internet connection won't help you if - FIRST - you're not psychologically
prepared for trading. When I teach about trading, I use a lot of sports
analogies because I believe there are a lot of parallels that can be
drawn between the two endeavors - the intensity, the emotional highs
and lows, the risks and the rewards.
Just as every serious athlete has a mental routine before each game,
so must you prepare psychologically each day before you begin trading.
That preparation is just as necessary for a veteran like me, who has
been trading nearly 20 years, as it is for the newbie. Granted, our
preparation may be slightly different, but it will encompass the same
factors:
* Clearing and centering your mind.
* Preparing/Studying indicators and technical analysis.
Let's take the first one - Clearing and centering your mind. At this
point, if you're saying to yourself, "Come on, I want to get to
the indicators and trade set-ups," then you really need this step.
You cannot dive into trading any more than a professional football player
would just suit up and go out onto the field. You must have some ritual
each day to separate your trading from the rest of your life. The purpose
is to clear your mind of distractions and to get centered. Trading is
serious business. Treat it that way.
Your choice of mental preparation will be a personal one. For me, my
favorite good-weather preparation is to chip golf balls onto the green
for an hour-and-a-half each morning. Or else I'm on the treadmill. Maybe
you jog, meditate, do Tai Chi, whatever?There must be an activity (I
prefer a physical one) that tells your mind, "Okay, the rest of
my life is being put aside. I'm preparing for trading."
I've seen so many talented young traders "blow it" because
they lacked the discipline or the ability to take on risk. Either they
took on too much risk and lost all their capital in one or a few trades,
or else they became the proverbial deer in the headlights when it came
to risk. The underlying factor, I believe, was they failed at the mental
game of trading.
The first rule in trading is to "know thyself." If you can't
control your own emotions, keep your ego in check, and remain, at all
times, disciplined, then you can't succeed. It's as simple as that.
Most importantly, you MUST control your emotions when it comes to losses.
Novice traders don't want to think about losses. They only want to think
about how much money they can make. The truth is, losses should ALWAYS
be on your mind. Why? Because losses are what will take you out of this
game. Profits take care of themselves - if you keep the losses to a
minimum.
Next.......
Index