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7 Tips to Profitable Contract for difference Investing



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By : Ic Markets    99 or more times read
Submitted 2010-06-14 06:44:03
Step 1 - Know Your Market
Share CFDs, sector CFDs and indices all have different margin requirements, trading times and spreads. ‘Know the principles of engagement’, should be the very first law of trading. Trading without a thorough understanding of the basics is like trying to drive a manual car when all you’ve ever driven is an automatic. Things can stall if you get overwhelmed.

Before you begin there are 3 key facts you should learn about the CFD you intend on trading:

Liquidity - There is no point in any trader attempting to buy or short sell over and above what's deemed to be normal market size. There have been instances where new CFD traders attempt to 'take -on' a thinly traded market. This usually ends in losses.

Spread - The difference between the buying price 'the offer' and the selling price 'the bid' of any given security is a product of the prevailing law of supply and demand and not generally a function of 1 market maker. Any market participant should base market analysis on realistic outcomes. Often new traders assess a profitability of a possible trade on one price outcome. This is seeking the result that they want, not what is realistically obtainable.

Typical Price Action - different securities have their very own distinct price action. Prepare yourself by studying the typical trading activity in the day for a share or index. In case your trading plan is based on the closing price only, make sure that you'll be able to 'wear' the intra day losses on the open positions within your account. It's great to look at a set of closing prices and see the 'trend' intact; when prior to the close the market in question was 15% against you from the previous closing price. This factor is amplified when dealing a geared product like CFDs.

Step 2 - Become proficient at using the trading platform
Fat fingers are usually not something exclusively suffered by private traders. Institutional dealers make errors of monumental proportions that dwarf anything seen in the CFD market.

In the long run, taking time learning the restrictions and additional features of the trading platform can make you money by saving you money in errors. Practice makes perfect; so a suggestion could be to trade a docile security in the minimum trade size, using all orders types including market orders, limits, and stoploss orders. Also make sure you are familiar with the times of the day these orders can be entered, cancelled or amended and the way an executed trade will appear on screen.

Step 3 - Understand the trade sequence and your position
Every trader must have her or his own reconciliation process and never rely solely on the software to report your position. One suggestion is always to print or write your own dealing tickets like an institutional trader. If you maintain your trading records with the same efficiency as an institutional dealer in a bank, you should have an important advantage over the average private trader who is normally lax in the record-keeping department.

Step 4 - Maximise technology
Make sure that you do not make the 200 versus 56 mistake - i.e. open a $200k account with a PC that has a 56k modem. Broadband has never been more affordable. Stick the dealing room number to your PC. If you only have one phone line then, yes, you will have to log-off to call. At a minimum you need a second phone, whether that is a land line or a mobile. When a trader has lost internet connection trading opportunities can be missed. Don’t make a technological glitch the reason for losing money in the markets.

Step 5 - Expect stress and handle it
Give yourself a break. Trading is stressful. Remember the market is actually right, so when you are wrong, don’t take it personally. The truth is that a few of your trades will probably be wrong, learn to take your losses. Every trader has heard this a thousand times and yes it's difficult to chop a losing trade only to see it drift back on side minutes later.

The best trading philosophy is to minimise losses over time and not to operate on the 'I hope' school of trading. Make sure of one thing- survival. In the event you lose all you money by breaking your personal rules then you can't stay in the game. Staying in the game even with a reduced trading account balance is better than having to walk away completely.

Step 6 - Look forward not backwards
Crying regarding the past is one of the most common mistakes of private traders. Regretting trades that weren’t taken is as common as regret for those bad trades that were taken. Get accustomed to the concept that you'll be prone to making unprofitable trades and these can't be avoided. How many times have you heard expressions from traders like "I should have, I could have ".

In the financial markets it comes right down to the simple truth - ‘did’. Anything else is irrelevant. Always assess why you've got a position in any given security on your books, write on the large white board your stoploss and take profit levels, take time out to ask repeatedly why you are long X or short Y.

Step 7 - Plan your trade, trade your plan
Probably the biggest differences between a gambler and an expert trader is the existence of a plan. A trading plan should not only be a goal list for your trading but should provide enough details to give the trader exact rules for any possibility that may arise. The greater detailed your plan, the less emotional involvement can enter your trading procedure, especially when a position goes against you.

There are no golden rules for being profitable consistently. Be wary of anyone offering a seminar claiming they might demonstrate a method of consistently 'beating the market'. Many of these folks do not trade or generate profits themselves. A number of them do make money trading but you ought to ask for his or her trading statements prior to hand over your cheque. This is often how any bank or hedge fund hires traders; the traders have to show their track record first.

Author Resource:

John Masterton is a professional CFD trader trading with Australia's largest and most popular CFD broker , IC Markets. Ben has published a number of articles on CFD education including guides and ebooks which you can download for free.

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