Strategic Planning

Trades & Stocks

What is a trading plan?

A trading plan is a comprehensive decision-making tool for your trading activity. It helps you decide what, when and how much to trade. A trading plan should be your own, personal plan – you could use someone else’s plan as an outline but remember that someone else’s attitude towards risk and available capital could be vastly different to yours.

Your trading plan can include anything you would find useful, but it should always cover:

  • Your motivation for trading
  • The time commitment you want to make
  • Your trading goals
  • Your attitude to risk
  • Your available capital for trading
  • Personal risk management rules
  • The markets you want to trade
  • Your strategies
  • Steps for record keeping

A trading plan is different to a trading strategy, which defines precisely how you should enter and exit trades.

Why do you need a trading plan?
You need a trading plan because it can help you make logical trading decisions and define the parameters of your ideal trade. A good trading plan will help you to avoid making emotional decisions in the heat of the moment. The benefits of a trading plan include:

Easier trading

all the planning has been done upfront, so you can trade according to your pre-set parameters

More objective decisions

you already know when you should take profit and cut losses, which means you can take emotions out of your decision-making process

Better trading discipline

by sticking to your plan with discipline, you could discover why certain trades work and others don’t

More room for improvement

defining your record-keeping procedure enables you to learn from past trading mistakes and improve your judgment

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How to create a trading plan

Range of markets

Outline your motivation

Figuring out your motivation for trading and the time you’re willing to commit is an important step in creating your trading plan. Ask yourself why you want to become a trader and then write down what you want to achieve from trading.

Decide how much time you can commit to trading

Work out how much time you can commit to your trading activities. Can you trade while you’re at work, or do you have to manage your trades early in the mornings or late at night?

If you want to make a lot of trades a day, you’ll need more time. If you’re going long on assets that will mature over a significant period of time – and plan to use stops, limits and alerts to manage your risk – you may not need many hours a day.

It’s also important to spend enough time preparing yourself for trading, which includes education, practising your strategies and analysing the markets.

Define your goals

Any trading goal shouldn’t just be a simple statement, it should be specificmeasurableattainablerelevant and time-bound (SMART). For example, ‘I want to increase the value of my entire portfolio by 15% in the next 12 months’. This goal is SMART because the figures are specific, you can measure your success, it’s attainable, it’s about trading, and there’s a time-frame attached to it.

You should also decide what type of trader you are. Your trading style should be based on your personality, your attitude to risk, as well as the amount of time you’re willing to commit to trading. There are four main trading styles:

  • Position trading: holding positions for weeks, months or even years with the expectation they will become profitable in the long term
  • Swing trading: holding positions over several days or weeks, to take advantage of medium-term market moves
  • Day trading: opening and closing a small number of trades in the same day and not holding any positions overnight, eliminating some costs and risks
  • Scalping: placing several trades per day, for a few seconds or minutes, in an attempt to make small profits that add up to a large amount
Choose a risk-reward ratio

Before you start trading, work out how much risk you’re prepared to take on – both for individual trades and your trading strategy as a whole. Deciding your risk limit is very important. Market prices are always changing and even the safest financial instruments carry some degree of risk. Some new traders prefer to take on a lower risk to test the waters, while some take on more risk in the hopes of making larger profits – this is completely up to you.

It is possible to lose more times than you win and still be consistently profitable. It’s all down to risk vs reward. Traders like to use a risk-reward ratio of 1:3 or higher, which means the possible profit made on a trade will be at least double the potential loss. To work out the risk-reward ratio, compare the amount you’re risking to the potential gain. For example, if you’re risking $100 on a trade and the potential gain is $400, the risk-reward ratio is 1:4.

Remember, you can manage your risk with stops

Decide how much capital you have for trading

Look at how much money you can afford to dedicate to trading. You should never risk more than you can afford to lose. Trading involves plenty of risk, and you could end up losing all your trading capital (or more, if you are a professional trader).

Do the maths before you start and make sure you can afford the maximum potential loss on every trade. If you don’t have enough trading capital to start right now, practise trading on a demo account until you do.

Assess your market knowledge

The details of your trading plan will be affected by the market you want to trade. This is because a forex trading plan, for example, will be different to a stock trading plan.

First, evaluate your expertise when it comes to asset classes and markets, and learn as much as you can about the one you want to trade. Then, consider when the market opens and closes, the volatility of the market, and how much you stand to lose or gain per point of movement in the price. If you’re not happy with these factors, you may want to choose a different market.

Start a trading diary

For a trading plan to work it needs to be backed up by a trading diary. You should use your trading diary to document your trades as this can help you find out what’s working and what isn’t.

You don’t only have to include the technical details, such as the entry and exit points of the trade, but also the rationale behind your trading decisions and emotions. If you deviate from your plan, write down why you did it and what the outcome was. The more detail in your diary, the better.

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