Easy Trade.

29 Jul

E-currency Exchange Trading

If you are reading this article you are probably one of the many people who have spent countless hours searching for unique ways to make money on the internet. Very few people have gone on to succeed and most have failed miserably time and time again.

So how are some people succeeding? The answer is quite simple; they are finding a business that works with their specific strengths and needs. The majority of people today trying to get into the home-based business industry are not salesmen and genius marketers. People fiddle around looking in all the wrong places wasting loads of money on advertising that isn’t working and E-books that promise wealth.

It took me five years to find a business that did not involving selling, building a down-line or that required me to recruit more people. That is when I stumbled across e-currency exchange trading.

So what is it then? E-currency exchange allows users to build a financial portfolio through a complex system of thousands of people exchanging funds from dollars to electronic currency. There are two sides to the trading system, the portfolio side and the console side.

Initially users can create a portfolio that receives 1.5% to 4.0% gains per day on the amount of money in the portfolio. For example, if you put in $1,000 and received gains at a rate of 3.5%, your profits for one day would be $3.50. This money is compounded daily and grows continuously over time. It is not uncommon for people who initially invest $100 to grow their portfolio value to $1000 in 1 month. It is easy to see that over time there is money to be made here.

Once you have been in the e-currency exchange program for 90 days and your portfolio has grown to a value of $5000, you are able to apply for a console. With a console you can now process requests from people that wish to take their money from e-currency and convert it back to the dollar or from the dollar back to e-currency. Console holders receive a percentage of the total amount exchanged as profit. Usually people take that profit and reinvest back into their portfolio.

The only down-side is learning how to navigate through the e-currency network which is extremely difficult without assistance. Most people try it out for a few days, become frustrated and quit because they simply do not know what they are doing. There are plenty of resources available if one just takes the time to look for them.

Copyright 2005 Timothy Rohrer

Learn how Tim Rohrer turned $100 into $1,500 in 32 days trading e-currencies.
http://www.mazumoney.net
E-mail: onlinesupport@mazumoney.net
Feel free to contact us at anytime via phone or e-mail.

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28 Jul

Are You Calmed and Relaxed When You Trade

Sometimes I get some really strange questions in the mail. The one that follows is one of them. Although I try to be like “Rambo” when I trade, I haven’t in actuality fully achieved “Rambo’s” degree of “coolness.”

“Joe, is it really true that you are able to stay calm and relaxed when you trade? Are you saying you have never cracked under pressure?”

There have been times when I made mistakes under pressure, but I don’t recall ever cracking under pressure. By that I mean I didn’t panic, but I have come close. Being short soybeans when Chernobyl blew up was probably the closest. I’ve made huge errors in conduct - once I sat and lost $45,000 in a matter of minutes because I tried trading while teaching a student at the same time. Lesson learned: Never trade and teach at the same time. Stay focused on one or the other. I once woke up to a margin call of $21,000+, but it turned out in my favor. I had erroneously left a 5-lot in the market overnight - thinking I was flat - the result of sloppy housekeeping.

Nevertheless, I have learned how to make trades in a relaxed, but focused way. I don’t put unnecessary pressure on myself. I don’t let myself get stressed out - it’s simply too costly to do that.

I don’t believe that I have to be successful on any one trade; I keep my focus on the big picture. I don’t believe I need to be right. I don’t try to impose my will on the market. And I definitely don’t try to predict the future of price movement. The market is the market - it does what it wants to do.

What I do is to closely observe market conditions and movement, and make up a detailed plan of attack. I trade what I see, allowing the market to take me where it wants to go.
I make a serious effort to stay calm and relaxed, and ready to act on whatever happens next.

Once I have a trading plan, I follow it. I do not doubt or second-guess my plan. I meditate on my plan and picture myself carrying it out successfully, before I ever enter a trade. I really believe in mental imaging as being an important activity.

I enter and exit trades without worrying about the consequences. Worrying has never helped me to trade well. Worrying is wasted energy. By staying focused, I am able to see trading opportunities more easily, and that allows me to take advantage of the opportunities when they arise.

Trading is a lot like playing sports. Players must stay objective, calm, and not crack under the strain of wanting to be “the best” or “perfect.” I am definitely not a perfectionist.

I recall one year when college football fans observed what happens when a team seems to be playing “so perfectly” that some say they are “unbeatable.” All season long, the Oklahoma Sooners had been winning, and winning big. They were the only undefeated college football team, until the day they lost by over three touchdowns to the Kansas State Wildcats. What’s surprising about this loss is not that the Sooners lost, since even the best teams can lose occasionally. It was the way they lost and how they seemed to be defeated psychologically. After making their only touchdown in the early moments of the game, they seemed to be stunned and shaken for the rest of the game. They couldn’t make even a single touchdown. It was unexpected and hard to believe. One commentator said it was like the bully who had never been beaten down. They knew how to win, but when upset and knocked down, they didn’t know how to get back up. Sooners’ Quarterback Jason White said, “They put pressure on us and got to us a few times.” And as the clock ticked away, Kansas State made another touchdown, then another, and then another. During the final minutes of the game one announcer said of the Oklahoma team, “They just want to lick their wounds and go home.”

From a purely psychological perspective, one can wonder what would have happened had the Sooners lost one of their first few games. Maybe they would have learned how to recover from a setback, and when they were down by a couple of touchdowns, they could have easily come back to make the win. It’s like what some hedge fund managers say about good traders: “The best traders are those who have blown out their accounts a few times. They know what it feels like, know how to recover from it, and the possibility doesn’t haunt them anymore.”

Although it’s unpleasant to think about, it’s worth considering the worst-case scenario, and making a detailed plan to recover should it happen. It’s just one strategy for learning how to trade in a carefree manner so that should you face a severe financial setback, you can recover from it. So-called “trading in the zone” requires intense concentration and focus, and it’s difficult to maintain this stance when the pressure is on you to perform. Thus, you must do whatever you can to reduce the perceived psychological pressure. The most obvious way to relieve such pressure is to think in terms of probabilities and carefully manage risk. It’s useful to remember that you may not win on any single trade; but after a series of trades, you will have enough winners to make a profit in the long run. It’s also important to manage your risk. Determine your risk up-front and risk only a small amount of trading capital on a single trade. Doing so will ease a lot of the pressure, allowing you to be more open to see the opportunities that the market offers. Don’t crack under the pressure of a potentially mortal financial defeat. Consider the possibility, and be ready to recover from it.

Joe Ross
Trading Educators Inc

Joe Ross has been trading for more than 47 years, and is a well known Master Trader. He has survived all the up and downs of the markets because of his adaptable trading style, using a low-risk approach that produces consistent profits.

Joe is the creator of the Ross hook, and has set new standards for low-risk trading with his concept of “The Law of Charts

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27 Jul

Is Trading a Profession You Really Should be Pursuing

Over the past few months I have had a significant increase of people contacting me inquiring my mentoring services that I offer for trading. Many who have contacted me have very little trading experience. One of the first questions I ask each person is why they want to become a trader. The answer is most always the same with the response, “I hear you can make a lot of money trading”. This case is true, but most fail to look at the risk involved with the business of trading.

There is substantial risk, especially for people thinking they can become a successful trader in a short period of time. To become a trader takes time, no different than any other profession. In order for one to succeed, it is necessary to get education to save money and time. Whether you are a carpenter, electrician, plumber, lawyer, or a doctor. Any profession you obtain requires hard work and dedication. It was necessary to familiarize your field, and you had to work on developing skills in order in becoming a master at what you researched.

I often wonder why so many people think trading is so easy compared to other professions and careers. Have we been habituated into thinking we don’t need to work hard? If you are ever up late in the evening or up very early in the morning watching TV, and surf through the channels, you will see we are in the age of info commercials on television. Selling is an easy fix for everything from easy weight loss, easy work out routines with exercise equipment, building fortunes in real estate with no money down and many other get rich quick schemes.

Even promoting how to trade stocks and the futures markets for a living. All of these advertisings have one main factor in common. They all make everything we want look so easy to acquire. Learning appears effortless. The advertisers all know how to push the hot buttons and make the sale. The majority will find out after they receive these so called “great products”. These people will learn that the false features that looked so good on TV, are not reality. One must set goals for themselves, and work hard in order to achieve them. The truth is that there are no short cuts in life, and things that we want must be worked for. Money is never made easily.

A process that I use for people who associate with me about my mentoring services is a simple questioning of ones life accomplishments and failures. This method can save them a great deal of time and money. The goal of the exercise to make one think about themselves so they can become a confident trader.

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