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Minimize Trading Risk

How Do YOU Minimize Trading Risk?

 

Skilled Traders Know How To Minimize Trading Risk

Knowing how to minimize risk is the very first thing every day trader needs to know. In fact, knowing how to minimize risk is more important than knowing how to trade because knowing how to trade without knowing how to minimize risk will not lead to long term trading success. All big businesses that have become successful over the long term have risk minimization at the center of their business model. For example, when a bank makes a mortgage loan and the homeowner default on that loan, the bank minimizes risk by taking away the entire house, not just the portion that they loaned. For them, foreclosure laws protect them and minimize the risk. So how can traders minimize risk? I consider risk minimization so important that I offer a free course that teaches about recognizing and minimizing risk. Of course, after learning how to minimize risk, it’s important to learn how to trade properly. Part of learning how to trade properly is knowing the basic trades and also knowing the trading zone for the day. Find more information at timelessdollar.com

Anyone who wants to learn how to day trade S&P emini futures needs to know how to minimize trading risk. Traders also need to have as much information as possible in order to help determine where to place a trade. Trading is not easy to do because it is impossible to know the future with any degree of certainty. But the market does give off signals and a wise trader needs to know how to interpret the signals. Market prices seem to move erratically, but with enough information, trading S&P emini futures can be done with a greater assurance of success. An S&P emini futures trader who has Information about market signals and knows how to use them makes knowledgeable traders much more successful than others who use “seat of the pants” method. 

Some of the information that S&P emini futures traders should have are:

  1. The Trend
  2. The Intraday and / or Low
  3. The Calculated Trading Zone via Taylor’s Book Method
  4. The daily calculated range
  5. Support and resistance levels
  6. Stochastics
  7. Candlestick patterns

These are some of the bits and pieces of information every trader needs to have in order to assess a trade. Of course, that is not to say that even with all this information a trade will work out, but having this knowledge puts the odds of success more on the trader’s side.

Having as much information as possible gives S&P emini day traders a big advantage over “seat of the pants” traders. It cannot be stressed enough that without learning as much as possible about the market, it is highly unlikely that a trader will succeed at making money by day trading S&P emini futures, much less in a trading career.

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