THE PROFITABLE TRADING ATTITUDE by Toni Turner March 8, 2007
Posted by futurestrader in Futures.3 comments
THE PROFITABLE TRADING ATTITUDE:
by Toni Turner
List Price: $499.00
3DVD over 6 Hours or Training
Big profits are made from “dumb” money or trades where the person on the other side of the trade is not smart enough to see what they are giving away or, more likely, too emotionally involved to let go.
Toni Turner now provides a step-by-step guide to make sure you are on the winning side of those trades. By developing a trading plan and visualizing those trades, you’ll be able to:
–Establish the tone of your day to provide the best possible chance for gains
–Create a routine that makes the most critical element of your day an unbreakable habit
–Survey the market climate to determine what trades will win
–Set up your trades to achieve your goals in any market climate
This breakthrough course will provide you with a personal evaluation system that exposes the emotional baggage that is costing you money in every trade. It will then break down these obstacles and hardwire your core strengths to your trading plan to significantly improve your percentage of profitable trades.
Toni reveals her “Sidewalk” technique, developed through years of experience that resulted from painful losses and has helped develop consistent gains. This easy-to-understand strategy ties the impact of fear and greed and objective stops together into a powerful and objective approach. When you have to unravel your psychology and the psychology of the market from every trade, it amplifies the effort and risk of each trade. Lock down your trading plan and by removing your emotion, you will be able to see the opportunities in the market unfold before you and let you take the profits others are leaving on the table. More than 6 hours in length.
Recommended reading for ETF, futures traders.
Futures Fundamentals January 10, 2007
Posted by futurestrader in Futures.add a comment
Futures Fundamentals
An Introduction
What we know as the futures market of today came from some humble beginnings. Trading in futures originated in Japan during the 18th century and was primarily used for the trading of rice and silk. It wasn’t until the 1850s that the U.S. started using futures markets to buy and sell commodities such as cotton, corn and wheat.
A futures contract is a type of derivative instrument, or financial contract, in which two parties agree to transact a set of financial instruments or physical commodities for future delivery at a particular price. If you buy a futures contract, you are basically agreeing to buy something, for a set price, that a seller has not yet produced. But participating in the futures market does not necessarily mean that you will be responsible for receiving or delivering large inventories of physical commodities—remember, buyers and sellers in the futures market primarily enter into futures contracts to hedge risk or speculate rather than exchange physical goods (which is the primary activity of the cash/spot market). That is why futures are used as financial instruments by not only producers and consumers but also speculators.
The consensus in the investment world is that the futures market is a major financial hub, providing an outlet for intense competition among buyers and sellers and, more importantly, providing a center to manage price risks. The futures market is extremely liquid, risky, and complex by nature, but it can be understood if we break down how it functions.
While futures are not for the risk-averse, they are useful for a wide range of people. In this tutorial, you’ll learn how the futures market works, who uses futures and why, and which strategies will make you a successful trader on the futures market.




