Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Futures platform - What qualities do futures traders need?
What qualities do futures traders need?
According to the experience of some successful western investment masters and my personal experience, I think a successful futures trader should have three important qualities:

First, be considerate-understand the market.

The market trend is unpredictable, no one will provide you with effective analysis methods, and everything can only be summarized by yourself. Without a good understanding, it is difficult to have a more objective and comprehensive understanding of the internal and objective laws of the market, let alone sum up a unique and effective analysis method.

Second, a good attitude is a normal mind-know yourself.

"If you win, you will not be arrogant and you will not lose." Successful traders should keep a clear head no matter what happens, in order to keep an objective understanding of the market and strictly implement their trading plans as always. A successful trader can trade easily, enjoy trading, and making money is just a by-product of happy trading!

Third, strict self-discipline-coordinate your relationship with the market.

The futures market is full of temptations all the time, and human nature also has various weaknesses. Only strict self-discipline can resist the temptation of the market and overcome the weakness of human nature. There is a good saying, "Plan your trade, trade your plan." The important reason for the failure of many investors' trading is not the error of analysis, but that their trading has no plan, or there is a plan but it has not been strictly implemented from beginning to end.

There has always been a misunderstanding: successful futures traders are all from high flyers, famous universities and highly educated, and traders have to rack their brains to make a profit. In fact, futures trading is by no means an academic. In the futures history of the United States 100 years, many facts can prove that our formal education actually hindered our trading ability. Because there is no truth such as physics and mathematics in the financial market, the artistic component of trading far exceeds science. When a futures trader drafts a decision, he can never fully understand every argument behind the decision. The market has its inherent objective laws, and formal school education has instilled too many abstract theories and fixed patterns of human behavior. How can we understand the chaotic behavior of the market? Therefore, I think: as long as you have the above three important qualities, you can grow into a very successful futures trader! This has nothing to do with his educational background.