Here's a great 'ten simple steps' stock trading  strategy which you can use to maximize your trading profits whilst at the same  time minimizing risk to your trading capital. If you already do your own trading  and can set automatic buy/sell orders then this strategy is perfect for you.
 
 No matter which stock trading strategy you read about or try, they all share one  fundamental principal, that is to buy low and sell high. Sounds simple enough,  but then why do some 95% of traders manage to get in and out of the market at  the wrong time, over and over and over again?
 
 What over-powering force is in place which steers the 95% to do this? The answer  is human nature and the counter-intuitive manner in which the stock market  operates.
 
 The 5% of traders who consistently make money in the stock market do so by  buying when the masses are selling, and selling when the masses are buying.
 
 They do this by following a dozen or so strategies, some simple, some more  complicated. It is not in the scope of this article to go into each and every  strategy, but here's one anyone can use.
 
 The links at the end of this article point to the web page where you can see  this strategy in the form of charts and graphs which make it much easier to  understand. Take a look if you're finding it difficult to picture it.
 
 The Ten Steps Strategy:
 
 1. Study the 12 month charts of several reasonably well known companies and pick  out stocks that have been in a steady UPWARD trend throughout the period. There  are always plenty of them, even in a falling market.
 
 No stock is ever a sure thing, but give yourself a head start by choosing one  which is going in the right direction! Fundamentals don't mean anything if the  price of your chosen stock is trending downwards. Don't care what the company is  or what it does. This is irrelevant, you are just here to make money, period.
 
 2. Check out the trading volumes and eliminate any which lack decent liquidity.
 
 Avoid stocks with not much liquidity (not a lot of buyers/sellers) as you need  to be able to get in and out easily and without effecting the price yourself.
 
 3. Study the 3 month chart and check the recent levels of resistance. These are  points where the stock price has peaked and then pulled back, before breaking  new heights again.
 
 4. Place a mental note to buy at a price just above the most recent top. Note  you are not actually buying at this point, just making a mental note to buy when  it hits this price.
 
 The stock will need to reverse upwards again and 'break through' that last  resistance level to effectively 'buy you in'.
 
 If the stock price does not reverse but instead further drops away, simply lower  your 'mental buy order' to just above the resistance levels going down and wait  for the stock to turn back upwards again.
 
 The great part is the more it drops the better as you have still not bought in.
 
 If it is a well known company and there's temporary bad news surrounding it  (anything except impending closure) you can be sure this stock will eventually  bounce back and catch up with (or even temporarily over-take) its long term  trend.
 
 When it does it will catch up quickly, over a few weeks perhaps. Follow the next  steps and you will be sitting on it all the way up to next top. Gains as much as  30% are common.
 
 5. When the stock price eventually reverses direction back up and passes up  through your buy order, immediately buy at market price.
 
 6. Now set your stop loss. Study the last couple of months of the chart and  check the rising levels of support. These are points where the stock has resumed  its upward direction following a pull back.
 
 7. Place a 'note to sell' at a price just below a recent support level. Not too  close but not more than 5-8% below your buying price. Your sell order is now  your stop-loss.
 
 I cannot stress more - you MUST use a stop loss. Your stop loss will protect  your capital if the stock unexpectedly reverses down again. You can always get  back in later when it recovers from a very deep pull back (and make even more  money in the process).
 
 8. As the stock price moves up, but as soon as reasonably possible, move your  stop loss (sell order) up to your buying price. Your stop loss is now your break  even. Don't do this too soon as the stock price may possibly test the support  level above your stop loss before heading up again. Give it a few days to do  that if it's going to.
 
 9. As the stock price continues up, keep trailing your sell order up with it to  just below the support levels going up.
 
 10. When the stock price reverses direction and passes down through your sell  order, immediately sell at market price. Your sell order is now your stop gain.
 
 On a final note, one of the greatest obstacles to success will likely be you.  One of the hardest things to do is to actually sell when your stop is triggered.  There's always the voice in the back of your head telling you to hold on a bit  longer if the price moves against you. This could be the death nell of your  trading because if the price continues to fall it will erode your trading  capital.
 
 To counteract this danger you should try to automate many of these processes.  Set your stops and if the stop is triggered you can find out why afterward.
 
  
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