Why, hello there. pic.twitter.com/Xwe5Inw3AZ
— Steve Burns (@SJosephBurns) February 28, 2014
@SJosephBurns the problem with having "Bear" friends is they are unable to buy you dinner on Friday night. #trendfollowing
— Peter (@Trendanoid) February 27, 2014
@SJosephBurns the only thing that tells a trader he/she is great is the PnL
— LHommeAncien (@Lhommeancien) February 27, 2014
I talk to more people who hate this market, complain about valuations & looking to short than people riding the trend. THAT is not a bubble.
— Joseph Fahmy (@jfahmy) February 26, 2014
@SJosephBurns traders who accept the future is unknown generally don't personalize their positions and cut ties quickly. No ego/emotion.
— SystemsTrader95 (@SystemsTrader95) February 26, 2014
@SJosephBurns it sounds simple enough, to minimize losers and let the winners keep working, but easier said than done.
— SystemsTrader95 (@SystemsTrader95) February 26, 2014
"They" say you don't go broke taking a profit, but you can definitely go broke letting losers go unchecked. First out, best out, move on.
— SystemsTrader95 (@SystemsTrader95) February 26, 2014
Regardless of trading style, method or time-frame, most great traders follow one cardinal rule: Cut losers quickly without remorse.
— SystemsTrader95 (@SystemsTrader95) February 26, 2014
$TSLA shorts last option: Lease a $TSLA car, drive it to #CNBC and set it on fire.
— TheNorthman (@NorthmanTrader) February 25, 2014
$TSLA wow: http://t.co/atPmuwhxkY
— △ (@mnycx) February 25, 2014
With all due respect @DougKass the way you handled the $tsla trade going in short before earn. Then 2 average ups. Prob blew up traders
— Scott Redler (@RedDogT3Live) February 26, 2014
WhatsApp home office after the Facebook purchase was announced . –> pic.twitter.com/Ct1ZcEPng5
— Steve Burns (@SJosephBurns) February 22, 2014
Finding the right balance: Trading Card 236 by Michael Steinhardt #trading #markets #stocks $STUDY #success pic.twitter.com/9ys3S5dDt7
— Trading Cards (@TraderHMS) February 27, 2014
$SPY @tradingmemes pic.twitter.com/GCtOatmrJS
— Jason Freeman (@ChartLearning) February 27, 2014