Daddy, Why Aren't We Rich?
One Saturday morning, while he was sitting at his
computer studying the market, David's 7 year old daughter came up, tugged at his shirt sleeve, and said, "Daddy, why aren't we rich?" He looked his child in the
eye, and thought to himself, what a great question - why aren't we rich?
As she stood there
expectantly waiting for an answer, he struggled to
come to terms with the realization that, although he had focussed his complete
attention on trying to create wealth for more than 10 years, he had never
actually made any real headway.
He had bought and sold many Stocks
and several properties over those
years, but had never made any real money.
He looked at his daughter, and asked, 'What makes
you think we aren't rich, darling?'
She looked at him and said, 'Because you
said that if we were rich, you and mom wouldn't have to go to work any more, and
you both still work all the time. You said we could live at the beach and play
in the sand every day. I want to know what you are doing about that. When can we
go and live at the beach?'
Nothing like a child to cut straight to the heart
of the problem - and what was he doing about it?
'We're not rich because daddy made some
mistakes,' he finally answered. 'What kind of mistakes, daddy,' she asked.
'Well, I bought some shares that were going down and then didn't sell them soon
enough. Then I bought some houses but sold them again.' 'Why?' she asked.
He had to think about that. He had no reason to
buy those shares in the first place. He had no reason to hold on to them when
they kept going down. He had no reason to sell the properties either. Her logic
was flawless - why?
He had to change his strategy.
He owed it to himself and his family to finally
get his act together and make some changes - that was the day the pain of not
living up to his potential made him sit down and write out his trading plan and
his goals...his strategy and rules - his life raft.
He started by writing out his vision - what he
wanted his life to look like when he became a successful trader and investor,
then worked backwards from there - through the details of how he was going to
achieve his dream.
He saw in his mind the 4 bedroom apartment on the
beach, the red Ferrari 360 Modena, the plasma screen computer monitor in an
office overlooking the surf beach 7 floors below, the family holidays in the
Greek islands, the significant donations to worthwhile causes and children's charities.
He visualised all the tremendous benefits of
becoming a successful trader.
He realised that
he was afraid of losing, and that fear was just too
expensive to let it control his life any longer!
He decided that he would no longer accept
anything less than full compliance with his trading plan.
He decided that he would take every
trade entry signal and follow his trading plan as if his life depended on it.
As if, after each trade was closed out, he had to
stand in front of a Panel of his trading Mentors, and explain his actions to
them - why he entered where he did, where he placed his stop losses, why he
exited when he did.
And if they weren't convinced he followed the
rules of successful trading, he would be taken out and shot!
This certainly focused his attention on only
trading strong trends - trends where the
price bars were trading above their respective moving averages for long trades,
or below for short trades, and the Stock price was moving strongly in one
direction.
He pretended that if he couldn't justify his
trading decisions to his trading Mentors, he was dead...
That was the day he resolved to study his
selected group of Stocks, the ones that had a track record of trending strongly,
every day. He would then take every trade his system produced, put his stop loss
orders in the market as he entered each trade it a
place where the trend had to change
to take him out of the trade, and he would hold every position until the trend changed.
He would act 'as if' he was a great trader,
even though his record up to that point had been less than inspiring...
That innocent question from a child turned out to
be the start of David's successful trading career.
He started to trade
profitably and consistently for the first time in his
life. He
thought he was doing well, and indeed he was making money.
He knew from his wealthy mentors that rich people
are different; they make rational decisions based on facts, not emotions. They
understand the value of money - they respect it as a tool for building a better
world. They buy well for logical reasons and hold until there is a valid reason
to sell.
Then one day, he closed out a trade, and
excitedly told his daughter, 'Daddy made a big profit in the market today
darling, come and look and see what I did.'
His daughter came over to the computer and looked
at the screen as he excitedly showed her where he had bought a Stock and then
sold for a $3000 profit. She looked at him and said, 'But daddy, it's still
going up, why did you sell it?'
His smile faded as the power of that question
sunk in...why had he sold it? What was he doing getting out of such a
strongly trending Stock just to take a profit? What would his trading
Mentors say?
She was right...the market was still open, so he
bought back in again. He had never been able to bring himself to do that before
- he was becoming a great trader!
The rally continued and he kept buying more
as it rallied. The trend finally changed, but his profit on that
trade, when he eventually got a valid sell signal, was $14500!
His daughter's question
2 weeks earlier was worth over $11000!
That was the last time he ever got out of a trade
based on his emotions. His fear of the market was gone - thanks to some simple
questions from a 7 year old...
So now, it's your turn. Whenever you are
preparing to place a trade, find a small child, even if you have to borrow one,
and ask them what the trend is. Then don't trade the other way!
If your trading isn't as great as you know it
could be, decide to create a trading plan now that will become
your life raft.
Remember, fear is just too
expensive.
If you are afraid of
losing money, reduce your position size until your fear goes away.
Once you have made a series of small profits, you
will be trading with the markets money and you can increase you position size
according to your growing confidence and account balance.
If you have a series of losses, reduce your
position size again until you get back on the right track. Stick to your trading
plan - whether it's the one that Peter outlines for you on the
website
or something else you have tested by paper trading until you are confident that
it works.
Then, just do it!