58 min

Anne-Marie Baiynd — Patience, process, and placing trades on your own terms Smarter Trading

    • Investing

Anne-Marie Baiynd joins us in Episode 4 of Smarter Trading to share her insights from nearly 20 years trading futures, stocks, and options. We discuss her dynamic strategy of analyzing the battle of supply and demand across multiple time-frames.
We also get into techniques to avoid beating yourself up as a trader when you’re having a bad day, why it’s important to enter trades on your own terms, and why being able to do nothing and sit on your hands is a superpower for traders. Please enjoy this episode!
Key learning points

Most traders observe then act but they miss a critical step of orienting
Price action supply and demand rules all markets
The ability to simply wait is such an important skill for a trader to acquire
Why Anne-Marie always assumes she’s wrong when she enters a trade
How to avoid and manage the internal negative self trader talk
Why the market is essentially a long vehicle
Why it’s important to enter trades on your own terms
Don’t be all in or out, take partial entries or exits
Manage risk so you can survive to learn over the long haul
Why it’s so important to set realistic expectations

Learn more & connect with Anne-Marie

Follow Anne-Marie here
Visit Anne-Marie website here

Learn more & connect with Evan & the Trade Risk

Browse the Smarter Trading podcast catalog for this episode's show notes and check out past guests
Watch this episode live on our YouTube channel
Follow @evanmedeiros on Twitter
Follow @TheTradeRisk on Twitter
Join the Trade Risk's weekly newsletter

Show Notes

0:00 Introduction
2:10 Anne-Marie’s background: Mathematics and human decision making
8:30 The ooda loop and how Anne-Marie uses it in her trading
14:00 Anne Marie’s futures trading
19:40 How to not beat yourself up and let emotions take over
27:00 How Anne Marie plans a stock trade
33:20 Being early to a pullback or correction
39:20 Futures trading structure and technique
44:00 The significance of weekly and monthly closes
47:40 Successful trading by improving the underlying process
51:4

Anne-Marie Baiynd joins us in Episode 4 of Smarter Trading to share her insights from nearly 20 years trading futures, stocks, and options. We discuss her dynamic strategy of analyzing the battle of supply and demand across multiple time-frames.
We also get into techniques to avoid beating yourself up as a trader when you’re having a bad day, why it’s important to enter trades on your own terms, and why being able to do nothing and sit on your hands is a superpower for traders. Please enjoy this episode!
Key learning points

Most traders observe then act but they miss a critical step of orienting
Price action supply and demand rules all markets
The ability to simply wait is such an important skill for a trader to acquire
Why Anne-Marie always assumes she’s wrong when she enters a trade
How to avoid and manage the internal negative self trader talk
Why the market is essentially a long vehicle
Why it’s important to enter trades on your own terms
Don’t be all in or out, take partial entries or exits
Manage risk so you can survive to learn over the long haul
Why it’s so important to set realistic expectations

Learn more & connect with Anne-Marie

Follow Anne-Marie here
Visit Anne-Marie website here

Learn more & connect with Evan & the Trade Risk

Browse the Smarter Trading podcast catalog for this episode's show notes and check out past guests
Watch this episode live on our YouTube channel
Follow @evanmedeiros on Twitter
Follow @TheTradeRisk on Twitter
Join the Trade Risk's weekly newsletter

Show Notes

0:00 Introduction
2:10 Anne-Marie’s background: Mathematics and human decision making
8:30 The ooda loop and how Anne-Marie uses it in her trading
14:00 Anne Marie’s futures trading
19:40 How to not beat yourself up and let emotions take over
27:00 How Anne Marie plans a stock trade
33:20 Being early to a pullback or correction
39:20 Futures trading structure and technique
44:00 The significance of weekly and monthly closes
47:40 Successful trading by improving the underlying process
51:4

58 min