Safe Sling Shot Trades
When is it a safe bet to enter a continuation trade? Always look back to the most recent support or resistance
Futures Insider Shares Day Trading Secrets!
When is it a safe bet to enter a continuation trade? Always look back to the most recent support or resistance
With the right tools futures trading can be as easy as 1-2-3. Successful trading is 90% mental, 80% money management and 10% signals. So do you need to be a superman to become a successful trader? No, it only seems that way!
You do have to hone your skills, learn your trading system inside and out, develop a money management plan that works for you, and learn to read market signals. And you have to practice, practice, practice to develop confidence in your system and your abilities. Futures trading is not for the faint of heart. It’s a risky business that attracts the world’s best and brightest. A game of skill, futures trading is equally a battle of sharp wits and killer instincts. Develop yours and the world is your oyster!
Welcome to FuturesBlogger.com. I’m Bill McCready, author of the Futures Trading Secrets Course.
Readers of this blog can look forward to articles, trading tips and charts which show how to day trade futures, including futures trading strategies, systems and resources, as well as money management and trading psychology for successful traders. You will find that these strategies will work for Forex trading and day trading stocks as well as futures trading.
DAY TRADING involves high risks and YOU CAN LOSE a lot of money. Commission rule 4.41(c)(1) applies to "any publication, distribution or broadcast of any report, letter, circular, memorandum, publication, writing, advertisement or other literature…."commission rule 4.41(b) prohibits any person from presenting the performance of any simulated or hypothetical futures account or futures interest of a CTA, unless the presentation is accompanied by a disclosure statement. The statement describes the limitations of simulated or hypothetical futures trading as a guide to the performance that a CTA is likely to achieve in actual trading. Commission rule 4.41(b)(1)(i) hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Also, since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under-or-over compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity. Simulated trading programs in general are also subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown.