Pinnacle Energy Corp. (OTCBB: PENC) is an independent oil and gas producer focused on acquiring and developing mature oil & gas producing assets. Pinnacle Energy Corp. is headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
NewsletterBenefit from the Recession!Posted Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008
The National Bureau of Economic Research effectively mastered the obvious Monday with the pronouncement that the U.S. economy is in a recession. Over the past 6 to 12 months, everyone from stockbrokers to street vendors have felt the pinch as the cre... |
Recent Blog EntriesPENC on the MovePosted Thursday, October 30th, 2008
Pinnacle Energy (OTCBB: PENC) is reacting as expected. Coming off lower support, the stock is up nearly 10% in just a few days. As stated Tuesday evening, look for "A break of that level (currently $1.20), look for $1.25 followed by $1.30 and new al... PENC May be Headed for New HighsPosted Thursday, October 16th, 2008
PENC stock price has broken above the upper symmetrical triangle trend line and could be headed for new highs.
A break above $1.19 will take PENC back to $1.25 followed by $1.30 and a new 52 week high above $1.40.... PENC.OB: I Was Close!Posted Friday, October 3rd, 2008
I was pretty darn close. PENC.OB hit $1.19 on Thursday before settling down a hair to close at $1.18.
My hopes of $1.20 were dashed, but just barely. Either way PENC.OB made a nice bounce from its recent low of $.97 on Tuesday.
While I'd normal... PENC.OB Showing Promise For Wednesday Trading. A Move Past $1.05 Would Be A Very Bullish SignPosted Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
PENC.OB stormed out of the gates on Tuesday morning moving up quickly from its opening price of $.97 to an intra-day high of $1.06.
After that, the stock continued to dip minutely and then rise back up to test the $1.05 level a few times but just ... PENC.OB Testing $1.06Posted Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
PENC.OB is testing the $1.06 level again in early trading and the stock has already traded more than 7K shares just 15 minutes into the day.
Despite analyst concerns that decreased energy demand will hold down energy prices going forward, PENC.OB ... |



Your trading progress can be easily tracked. In fact, it is black and white, right in front of you all the time. As tempting as it is to track every trade, like balancing a checkbook, it will work against your long term goal of unemotional, decisive, and successful trading.
Think macro, not micro.
One of the biggest challenges we face as traders is the reining of our emotions in times of decision. Trading is a statistics game and emotional trading is far from logical and almost always costly. That being said, evaluating your progress is, naturally, going to generate some emotions.
Let me give you an example. You think you are doing pretty well. You have made 5 trades so far in the day and each one turned out in your favor. Just to give yourself a big ole pat on the back, you decide to tally up the day. So what if it is only 3 hours into the trading day, you may have made enough to sit back the rest of the day and relax. So against your better judgment (and our staunch advice) you tally up your trading profits.
Scenario #1 – You did great. You made even more than you thought you did. Logically, you know that you should continue using your system and be even more disciplined because it has done so well for you. But you are feeling good! Endorphins are surging in your blood and you start thinking you are darn good at this trading stuff. So on your next trade, you take a little more risk that you might have normally because it feels right. You get a little careless. You see it in every movie. Pride cometh before a fall.
Can you see where we are going with this?
Scenario #2 – You didn’t do as well as you thought you did. It seemed like the day was productive but when looking back your profits were mediocre. Not bad, but not that great either. “Hmmm,” you think, “I have time to make up for this mediocre morning.” After all, you want to hit that daily goal and at this conservative rate, you may not. You let loose the reins just enough to squeak in an extra trade or two – so what if they are not ideal circumstances.
Can you see where we are going with this?
Bottom line is, tallying up your progress is something best done when your results will not affect that way you trade. If you have a system that works 70% of the time (more if you are in our chat rooms), you will end up ahead no matter when you tally up. Preferably, you should sit down and graph out your progress at the end of each month but we know how much restraint and patience that requires. If you must, tally up weekly on Friday afternoon AFTER YOUR TRADING DAY IS OVER!


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