My Current Investments

Main Labels:

3) AUDSGD (Link for AUD posts)
4) CNYSGD Closed TP 0.208 ( Link for CNYSGD posts)
5) Fullerton SGD Heritage Income Class B ( Link )
6) Global X Uranium ETF Long ( Link )
8) BGF China Bond Fund A6 Hedged (SGD) (Link)
7) US Stock Trade (Link)

Disclaimer :
None of the information contained in this Blog or Video constitutes an offer (or solicitation of an offer) to buy or sell any currency, product or financial instrument, to make any investments, or to participate in any particular trading strategy.

Any expression of opinion (which may be subject to change without notice) is personal to the author and the author makes no guarantee of any sort regarding the accuracy or completeness of any information or analysis supplied.

The author is not responsible for any loss arising from any investment based on any perceived recommendation, forecast, or any other information contained here.

Next Market Crash Stocks Accumulate LIst

Next Market Crash Stocks Accumulate LIst

Intrinsive Value Tracking

Friday, November 16, 2007

Responsible

The hard reality of trading is that, if you want to create
consistency, you have to start from the premise that no matter what the outcome, you are completely responsible. This is a level of responsibility few people have aspired to before they decide to become traders. The way to avoid responsibility is to adopt a trading style that is, to all intents and purposes, random. Random trading as poorly-planned
trades or trades that are not planned at all. It is an
unorganized approach that takes into consideration an
unlimited set of market variables, which do not allow you to find out what works on a consistent basis and what does not.

Randomness is unstructured freedom without
responsibility.When we enter an unplanned, random trade, it's much easier to shift the responsibility by blaming the friend or the broker for their bad ideas.

It is the fact that any trade has the potential to be a winner, even a big winner. That big winning trade can come your way whether you are a great analyst or a lousy one; whether you do or don't take responsibility. It takes effort to create the kind of
disciplined approach that is necessary to become a consistent winner.

No comments: