Traders need to master the changes in financial markets, seize opportunities and make correct decisions, all of which require practical experience. The market is changing rapidly, and academic qualifications cannot guarantee timely response. Traders need more practical experience to seize opportunities. A high degree of education may increase the pressure on traders and make them more worried about failure, thus affecting traders' investment decisions.
A trader is a person who acts as a principal or trades for the other party in a transaction. Place a buy or sell order, hoping to earn the difference. In contrast, a broker is a person or a company that acts as an intermediary to bridge the gap between the buyer and the seller. Excellent traders are the talents that banks, securities companies, listed companies, funds and professional trading companies are most willing to pay a lot of money to recruit, because the level of traders has a great impact on the company's performance.
Trading rules of traders
1, initiative principle: use your own "initiative" to enter and exit, and control the risk of futures trading under your nose. It has achieved the "final say" in winning or losing futures.
2. Micro-differentiation principle: "Micro-differentiation" gains, losses and positions are controlled within the safe range of price difference. Decisively enter and exit, and never delay holding loss orders for any reason for a long time.
3. Principle of independence: This transaction is unique. Whether you win or lose, it has nothing to do with the next transaction. You can't influence the decisive entry and exit of the next transaction because of the profit and loss of the last transaction or the price of entry and exit.
4. Principle of objectivity: The most intolerable thing about doing short-term work on the same day is that the market of the day is "subjectively" decided in advance. Short-term speculators can only go long or short today, which is a wrong thinking.