Since Last Post P/L: £42.32
Monthly P/L: £480.95
Saturday was supposed to be a big trading day for me but the sun was shining, spring was in the air and the temptation of a round of golf was too much to turn down. I played terribly but it was nice to be out and about after the cold dark winter we've just had. The lowlight of my round though was hitting a 4 iron to the par 3 fifth hole - it went left of the green, bounced once and then hurtled into a woman standing on the next tee! Ouch! This distraction obviously meant I missed the EDF Cup semi-finals but I was home in time to take a look at the World Cup cricket.
Australia v South Africa
I nearly got myself in a whole lot of trouble here. When I got home and switched on the TV I was shocked to see the Aussies finish their innings for a total of 375 runs. I'd estimated a par score at 265! I checked the price available on them and they were still trading at 1.18 which left me gobsmacked - surely this price was too big? I turned out to be right in the end but I'd failed to realise that the market had a different opinion and as soons as the Saffers had knocked up a few boundaries the Aussie price started drifting at a canter. As you can imagine, I was now staring at a big red screen and the South African score had powered up to 130 for no wicket - the Aussie price was now 1.83. I thought at this point that if the South African partnership could last another few overs then they'd gain favouritism so I laid the Australians for £235 and went to make dinner. I was gone for 10 minutes and when I returned the score was 156-0 and the Aussie price had swung out to 2.90! I jumped at the chance to secure a green screen and finished with a profit of £11.30. This was a lucky escape and I need to learn from this.
Bristol v Northampton
Today was the chance to trade on a Guinness Premiership match which both sides needed to win. I traded well and made a nice profit of £31.02.
For the last few days of the month my strategy now switches to consolidation. The Darts on Thursday should round it off nicely and if I can finish with a profit of £500+ I'll be extremely happy. That would be a growth of over 40% on my trading bank during March.
If you've been reading my blog for sometime then you'll already know that the majority of my profits come from trading Rugby Union & Darts. They're sports which I now feel very comfortable with and confident that I can make a profit on. However, I'm also aware that these sports won't provide an all-year income and I need some advice on how to go about trading cricket and tennis. If you can help then please leave a comment - I don't expect you to give away any edges but if you can point me in the right direction then it'd be appreciated. Thanks in advance!
In my Silver Linings post, I referenced my "hedge bet" on Harris, and I am
pleased to say it has so far paid off rather nicely. I wrote that:
...my bet on ...
2 comments:
Hello,
I've just found this site and am quite fascinated by it as Trading is something I've often thought of doing myself.
Do you have any tips for someone just starting out ?
The reason I ask, is that I'd assume the key is sticking to what you know (i.e I specialise is Football)
However, whilst I can happily do this, there's obviously a lot more to it than that.
Also, do you post your trades / fancies in advance of you posting the results on here ?
Hi Jonny,
Thanks for taking the time to post a comment.
12 months ago I was very cynical about trading. My view was that it was boring and any profits would be minimal - how wrong was I?!?!
I could spend all day giving tips to any new person to this subject but I'll stick to 3 for now:
1. Buy the book 'Lay, back and think of winning'. It's very basic but that's all you need when you're starting. Don't follow everything it says but try and read in-between the lines. It will give you a good grounding on some very important rules to trading successfully.
2. Manage your risk by trading with the right size stakes. This is very important and depends on 2 things - the price of the selection and the size of your trading bank
3. Successful traders always think "What if....?"
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