7 Steps to Successful Futures Day-Trading
My name is Ilan Levy-Mayer, and I am the Vice President and Senior Broker at Cannon Trading Co. I came up with the following personal observations to help you day-trade futures and commodities after serving online day-traders worldwide for more than nine years. The following steps are guides to progress, and are not necessarily in sequential order. Some of them are always required, but each day-trader is different and relate to the stages in unique ways.
Disclaimer: The material contained in this article is of opinion only and does not guarantee any profits. These are risky markets and only risk capital should be used. Past performances are not necessarily indicative of future results.
- Education — Hopefully, if you are already trading you have
completed your initial education: contract specs, trading hours,
brokers, platforms, risks and opportunities in futures.
Understanding this information is essential to trading. The
second type of education is constant: learning about trading
techniques, the evolution of futures markets, and different trading tools. - Find a Day-Trading System — I am definitely not advising you to go on the
web and subscribe to a "black box" system (using buy/sell
triggers if don't know why they are being generated). What I am
advising is developing a trading technique, a general set of rules
and a trading concept. As you progress, you may want to put the
different rules and indicators into a computerized system, but
the most important factor is to have a focus and a plan. Don’t
just wake up in the morning and trade "blank." - Survival — This is the key! Do what you need to do in order to
survive this brutal business and give yourself the chance of being here down the road with more experience and a better chance of success. Survival is probably the biggest key for beginner traders. There is a saying in this business: "live to trade another day" — it is so true!- Money Management — While it is closely related to survival, money management can also stand alone. For your own survival, you must set trade/daily/weekly loss limits. Sound money management is closely associated with knowing your risk-reward ratio (again, per trade and per time frame)
- Goals — You should have a game plan and established goals which will function as a road map to measure your progress and improvement. Set per-trade goals, daily goals, weekly goals, etc. Many of you who are clients are familiar with these questions: What is your daily profit goal? Where do you see yourself in a week from now...six months from now... year from now? How are you planning to get there? Break it down into small steps, and you'll always know whether or not you’re on the right course.
- Experience — If you made it to this stage you're on the right track! Just like anything else in life, the more experience you have, the greater your success is likely to be. The key is to acquire the experience without devastating your risk capital. What good is the experience without risk capital in your trading account?
- Learn Your Setups, Strengths, and Weaknesses — Teach yourself to recognize different set-ups that you feel comfortable and confident with. Then attack. You cannot get to this stage without doing the previous steps. If you did not survive, develop a trading system and set goals. You may recognize the right setups but lack the confidence or the cash to take advantage. I sometimes compare it to being the "pro," like the lion that is waiting patiently for its prey and then attacks when the time is right!
- Trading / Day-Trading / Swing-Trading on a Consistent,
Successful Basis — This means you will continue to evolve as a
day-trader and go through these stages over the years again and again.
Disclaimer: The material contained in this article is of opinion only and does not guarantee any profits. These are risky markets and only risk capital should be used. Past performances are not necessarily indicative of future results.




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