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Spot Forex
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An investment which involves the
simultaneous buying of one
currency and selling of another
and executed in currency pairs. It
operates on a 24 hour basis through
an electronic network of banks,
corporations, and individuals.
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Spot Commodity
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An investment which offers traders
the opportunity to profit from the
rise and fall of commodity prices
around the world. Most popular
commodities offered with huge
supply and demand factors such as
oils, metals, soft commodities & grains.
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Spot Index
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An investment which allows you to
profit on the overall movement of the
whole stock market by buying and
selling its stock index.
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Other CFDs
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An investment which allows you to
participate and profit in the price
movement of an underlying share
of any major global stock market
without any share ownership involved.
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Fund Management and Fixed Income
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An investment managed by a
team of experienced seasoned
fund managers which gives periodic
income at regular intervals at a
reasonably predictable levels.
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50 Reasons Why People Lose Money
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TOP 50 REASONS WHY TRADERS LOOSE MONEY
- Many traders
trade without a plan. They do not define specific risk and profit objectives
before trading. Even if they establish a plan, they "second guess" it and
don't stick to it, particularly if the trade is a loss. Consequently, they
overtrade and use their equity to the limit (are undercapitalized), which puts
them in a squeeze and forces them to liquidate positions.
- Usually they
liquidate the good trades and keep the bad ones. Many traders don't realize
the news they hear and read has, in many cases, already been discounted by the
market.
- After several
profitable trades, many speculators become wild and unconservative. They base
their trades on hunches and long shots, rather than sound fundamental and
technical reasoning, or put their money into one deal that "can't fail."
- Traders often
try to carry too big a position with too little capital, and trade too
frequently for the size of the account.
- Some traders
try to "beat the market" by day-trading, nervous scalping, and getting greedy.
- They fail to
pre-define risk, add to a losing position, and fail to use stops.
- They frequently
have a directional bias; for example, always wanting to be long.
- Lack of
experience in the market causes many traders to become emotionally and/or
financially committed to one trade, and unwilling or unable to take a loss.
They may be unable to admit they have made a mistake, or they look at the
market in too short a timeframe.
- They
overtrade.
- Many traders
can't (or don't) take the small losses. They often stick with a loser until it
really hurts, then take the loss. This is an undisciplined approach...a trader
needs to develop and stick with a system.
- Many traders
get a fundamental case and hang onto it, even after the market technically
turns. Only believe fundamentals as long as the technical signals follow. Both
must agree.
- Many traders
break a cardinal rule: "Cut losses short. Let profits run."
- Many people
trade with their hearts instead of their heads. For some traders, adversity
(or success) distorts judgment. That's why they should have a plan first, and
stick to it.
- Often traders
have bad timing, and not enough capital to survive the shake out.
- Too many
traders perceive Spot/Cash markets as an intuitive arena. The inability to
distinguish between price fluctuations which reflect a fundamental change and
those which represent an interim change often causes losses.
- Not following a
disciplined trading program leads to accepting large losses and small profits.
Many traders do not define offensive and defensive plans when an initial
position is taken.
- Emotion makes
many traders hold a loser too long. Many traders don't discipline themselves
to take small losses and big gains.
- Too many
traders are underfinanced, and get washed out at the extremes.
- Greed causes
some traders to allow profits to dwindle into losses while hoping for larger
profits. This is really lack of discipline. Also, having too many trades on at
one time and overtrading for the amount of capital involved can stem from
greed.
- Trying to trade
inactive markets is dangerous.
- Taking too big
a risk with too little profit potential is a sure way to losses.
- Many traders
lose by not taking losses in proportion to the size of their accounts.
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Often, traders do not recognize the difference between trading markets
and trending markets.
Lack of discipline is a major shortcoming.
- Lack of
discipline includes several lesser items; i.e., impatience, need for action,
etc. Also, many traders are unable to take a loss and do it quickly.
- Trading against
the trend, especially without reasonable stops, and insufficient capital to
trade with and/or improper money management are major causes of large losses
in the Spot/Cash markets; however, a large capital base alone does not
guarantee success.
- Overtrading is
dangerous, and often stems from lack of planning.
- Trading very
speculative counters is a frequent mistake.
- There is a
striking inability to stay with winners. Most traders are too willing to take
small profits and, therefore, miss out on big profits. Another problem is
undercapitalization; small accounts can't diversify, and can't use valid
stops.
- Some traders
are on an ego trip and won't take advice from another person; any trade must
be their idea.
- Many traders
have the habit of not cutting losses fast, and getting out of winners too
soon. It sounds simple, but it takes discipline to trade correctly. This is
hard whether you're losing or winning.
Many
traders overtrade their accounts.
- Spot/Cash
traders tend to have no discipline, no plan, and no patience. They overtrade
and can't wait for the right opportunity. Instead, they seem compelled to
trade every rumor.
- Staying with a
losing position, because a trader's information (or worse yet, intuition)
indicates the deteriorating market is only a temporary situation, can lead to
large losses.
- Lack of risk
capital in the market means inadequate capital for diversification and staying
power in the market.
- Some
speculators don't have the temperament to accept small losses in a trade, or
the patience to let winners ride.
- Greed, as
evidenced by trying to pick tops or bottoms, is a frequent error.
- Not having a
trading plan results in a lack of money management. Then, when too much ego
gets involved, the result is emotional trading.
- Frequently,
traders judge markets on the local situation only, rather than taking the
worldwide situation into account.
- Speculators
allow emotions to overcome intelligence when markets are going for them or
against them. They do not have a plan and follow it. A good plan must include
defense points (stops).
- Some traders
are not willing to believe price action, and thus trade contrary to the trend.
- Many
speculators trade only one counter.
- Getting out of
a rallying counter too quickly, or holding losers too long results in
losses.
- Trading against
the trend is a common mistake. This may result from overtrading, too many
day-trades, and undercapitalization, accentuated by failure to use a money
management approach to trading Spot/Cash.
- Often, traders
jump into a market based on a story in the morning paper; the market many
times has already discounted the information.
- Lack of
self-discipline on the part of the trader and/or broker creates losses.
Traders tend to do inadequate research.
- Traders don't
clearly identify and then adhere to risk parameters; i.e., stops.
- Most traders
overtrade without doing enough research. They take too many positions with too
little information. They do a lot of day-trading for which they are
undermargined; thus, they are unable to accept small losses.
- Many
speculators use "conventional wisdom" which is either "local," or "old news"
to the market. They take small profits, not riding gains as they should, and
tend to stay with losing positions. Most traders do not spend enough time and
effort analyzing the market, and/or analyzing their own emotional make-up.
- Too many
traders do not apply money management techniques. They have no discipline, no
plan. Many also overstay when the market goes against them, and won't limit
their losses.
- Many traders
are undercapitalized. They trade positions too large, relative to their
available capital. They are not flexible enough to change their minds or
opinions when the trend is clearly against them. They don't have a good battle
plan and the courage to stick to it.
- Don't make
trading decisions based on inside information. It's illegal, and besides, it's
usually wrong.
There you have
them, fifty rules from more than a thousand brokers who have handled more than
20,000 accounts. They've seen what worked, what didn't, and why. Following these
rules will not necessarily lead to success. Breaking them could increase your
chances of failure. Spot/Cash trading is not for everyone. Spot/Cash trading
involves the risk of loss.
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