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Futures Trading Education - The Commodity Trading Plan |
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The Commodities Trading Plan Commodity Market Forecasting Traders tend to begin with a price prediction technique or model with which they are most comfortable. After use in actual trading decisions, resulting profits and losses provide valuable feedback on the effectiveness of the technique. This feedback, in turn, is used to refine and improve the model. It is important that after every adjustment to the prediction model, you accumulate feedback to ascertain the desirability and effectiveness of the change. Only those changes that improve prediction performance of the model should be made permanent. With this process, you may eventually develop a trading model that generates reliable buy and sell signals. Of course, it is also possible that you may determine that the model is unsatisfactory, and a completely new one should be developed. To accumulate feedback on a relatively new prediction model, you may wish to place imaginary or fictitious trades to determine what the resulting profit or loss would have been had the buy or sell signal been taken. The advantage of this testing methodology is that you will not risk money until you are reasonably confident of the merits of the model. There is, however, no guarantee that the model will continue to be an effective predictor in the future, even if it has performed well in the past. commodity futures broker, futures trader, commodities futures trading, financial and commodity futures markets, paper trading, full service broker assisted accounts. Risk Management The example above illustrates a simple risk management rule that you will find in almost all futures trading textbooks: Cut Losses and Let Profits Run. In other words, if you close futures positions that begin to lose money and leave open those that are profitable, you will make money in the long run. Successful traders confirm this basic truth. Many even admit that they are wrong more often than right in predicting prices, but when they are right, they make a considerable sum of money that exceeds all losses combined. The result: their commodity futures trading is profitable overall. Determining the exact amount of loss that should be tolerated before a futures position is closed depends upon several factors. The amount risked on any given futures market position depends upon the amount of margin in your account. It is often suggested that no more than 5% of total margin be risked on any one futures position. The amount risked also depends upon the volatility of the futures being traded: the greater the volatility, the more is risked since you want to be able to carry the position through transitory price movements, or "noise", and to not have to exit a position prematurely. The size of your average trading gain also determines to what level you should limit loss. You need to limit loss at a level such that, over time, losses do not exceed gains in the aggregate. Many futures traders find stop orders very useful tools for risk management. Stop orders instruct the broker to close an outstanding futures position if prices move adversely to a specific level. Stop orders must be properly used to be effective: they should be placed at the same time that a new futures position is established. For instance, a trader may enter a market order to buy one gold futures when gold is trading at $385 per ounce, and enter a stop order to sell one gold futures at $379 per ounce, thus limiting loss to $6 per ounce or $600 per contract. (Be warned: stop orders do not guarantee execution at the stop price - greater loss may be incurred.) Using stop orders forces the trader to contemplate the "worse case scenario" at the outset and act to limit loss. By using stop orders, the trader eliminates much of the stress and anxiety that is associated with a futures position that is losing money. Those who don't use stop orders lose sleep instead and, if they talk themselves into not closing a position when they should have, lose a substantial amount of money as well. Just as with developing a prediction model, the parameters of a risk management system should be evaluated over time, and amended when appropriate. Actual trading profitability performance provides the trader with valuable feedback to perform such an analysis. commodity futures broker, futures trader, commodities futures trading, financial and commodity futures markets, paper trading, full service broker assisted accounts. Individuality |
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Futures Trading | Online Futures Trading | Forex Trading | Managed Futures | Managed Forex |
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