Trading is Not Gambling, Turn it Into a Business Let’s get one thing straight: trading is a business, not a gamble. If you treat...
Trading is Not Gambling, Turn it Into a Business
Let’s get one thing straight: trading is a business, not a gamble. If you treat it like gambling, you risk blowing up your account—just like most casino-goers who walk away empty-handed. But if you approach trading with the discipline and structure of a business, you increase your chances of long-term trading success.
Why You Must Treat Trading Like a Business
In any business, profitability requires a plan. Businesses evaluate performance, cut underperforming products or services, allocate capital wisely, and manage cash flow. The same principles apply to trading: Without profits that produce a cash flow a trader will lack the capital to trade.
• Net profits must exceed losses • Use trading performance analysis by instrument, strategy, and timeframe. In other words, focus on areas where your strategy is working the best. • Manage risk as that is the key to staying in the trading business.
Treating trading like a business puts you in the driver’s seat, empowering you to make data-driven decisions instead of emotional guesses. Use the following to guide you in the process:
1. Keep a Detailed Trading Journal
Your first step is to track everything. Without data, you’re flying blind. Maintain a trading journal and evaluate your results regularly (e.g. daily, weekly, or monthly). Key metrics to track include:
• Calculate the average profit/loss on winning vs losing trades for each forex pair or instrument (in pips and dollar terms) • Win/loss ratio for each currency pair or instrument • Calculate overall profit or loss for each forex pair or instrument and for total trading. • Analyze performance by currency pair or instrument • Look for outlier trades that might skew underlying results (e,g, outsized winner vs. loser) • Identify the maximum drawdown on any trade as that can impact your trading capital
2: Know Your Trading Style and Stats
Understanding your trading style is essential. Are you a scalper, day trader, range trader, swing trader, trend follower, or a combination?
Then, ask: What win/loss rate do I need on average to be profitable? Here are three examples to illustrate:
1: Win $100, lose $100 → need a minimum 51% win rate or more to be profitable 2: Win $60, lose $40 → need a minimum 41% win rate or more to be profitable 3: Win $40, lose $60 → need a minimum 61% win rate or more to be profitable Note all calculations are net of any commissions
Knowing your risk-to-reward ratio and necessary win rate gives you a clear performance benchmark and to evalkuate your system or approach (e.g. forex trading strategies). .
3: Improve Trading Performance with Smart Adjustments
If you’re not consistently profitable want to perform better ask yourself the following:
• Can I increase my average profit or reduce my average loss for each currency pair or instrument and for overall results? • Identify whether there are certain types of trades where I am “leaking” money by overtrading or taking low-probability setups or higher risks (e.g. news trading)? • Which currency pairs or markets work best with my system?
Sometimes, simply cutting out underperforming trades can significantly boost your bottom line. This is no difference when a business sheds an unprofitable or underperforming division or product.
4. Use Leverage Wisely and Risk Management in Trading
After evaluating and refining your system, first determine whether it is working (e.g. profitable). Then define your profit targets and risk parameters. Set a goal for return on capital and determine the optimal leverage to reach it—without taking unnecessary risks.
Choosing the leverage size is a personal decision. BUT remember, high is a powerful tool, but it can amplify losses just as easily as it magnifies gains and can seriously impact your ability to trade if your system goes on a losing streak that leads to large drawdowns. So, choose wisely and don’t get suckered in to the lure of high leverage/big [profits..
Trading Is a Business So Treat it That Way
Trading isn’t easy but it’s not gambling either. Like any business, it requires planning, discipline, performance analysis, and risk management. If you approach trading with the seriousness of running a business, you put yourself in a position to succeed.
So next time you sit in front of your trading terminal, remember: you’re not pressing a button to roll the dice or play a video game, you’re executing a decision for your business.
Take The FREE Trial of The Amazing Trader – Algo Charting and Risk Management
Click HERE
Published by:
John Matthews