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True Confidence in Trading

When people wax poetic about their conviction in trades, my emotional reaction is:  Whatever.  A trade is a bet at the poker table.  Some bets will work, some won’t; some you’ll size up, some you’ll fold.  Whatever.  Over time, if you play the odds, you’ll do OK.  Beyond that, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to beat the chest and invite overconfidence bias to replace normal confidence.

Every forecast of a statistical model can be wrong.  Every trading judgment is fallible.  If you have a 50% hit rate on your trades and you trade once a day, on average you’re going to have an occasion in which you lose every day for a week during a trading year.  That doesn’t mean you’re in a slump; it doesn’t mean you should change what you do.  It’s going to happen and you can mentally prepare yourself–and size yourself in such a way that five consecutive losing days won’t take you out of the game.

The goal is not to eliminate losses–that would require omniscience.  Rather, the goal is to  anticipate losses so that you’re never surprised, never overwhelmed, never thrown onto the back foot.  True confidence comes, not from believing that you must be right, but from knowing that you can survive and even thrive if you’re dead wrong.-from TraderFeed

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Chart:Co-relation between 2013 and 2014 returns

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RBI Video

Rajan:India is ready for US tightening

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Linkfest:14 Apri,2014

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Little known companies ride the market rally (ET)

Modified rally in Adani stocks not backed by fundamentals (BS)

Shares of Gujarat based companies soaring like crazy (FirstBiz)

How to deal with the uncertainty of trading (TraderFeed)

Don’t get dazzled by glittering growth (WSJ)

Is this the beginning of a crash? (TRB)

Is Arnab leaving Times Now? (GossipGuru)

Why 2002 will haunt Rajdeep and Barkha (Mediacrooks)

The Art of the Insult (BigPicture)

East India Company-The world’s first too big to fail firm (Climateer)