Trading Psychology: Why We Trade
Trading Psychology: Why We Trade
Trading Psychology: Why We Trade
Control of trader’s fear
Control of trader’s greed
Trader’s discipline.
Why We Trade
Trading is a highly exciting activity. The trouble is that it is hardly possible to feel excited
and make money at the same time! Think of a casino where amateurs celebrate over free
drinks, while professional card counters coldly play game after game, folding most of the
time and pressing their advantage when the card count gives them a slight edge over the
house.
To be a successful trader, you have to develop iron discipline.
Accepting Loss
The first reason why traders lose may seem obvious, but in reality, it stems from long-term
social conditioning: the inability to accept loss. Loss generates powerful emotions such as
fear, uncertainty, apprehension, and self-doubt, especially with men.
Men are socially conditioned to succeed from the moment they enter the world. They are
brought up to become achievers. Influenced by family, friends, education, and career
environment, they are encouraged to seek professions as doctors, lawyers, and bankers.
Striving to be right, number one, the breadwinner, and the best, always seeking
perfectionism. Men are socially conditioned to be family providers. Moreover, various
cultural pressures and demands add up to this, and as a result man have an intrinsic
fundamental obligation to succeed.
The solution is to take a reality check. Losing is part of the game. The possibility to lose is
always there. Bottom line: traders do lose. The how much and how often is what
distinguishes great traders from those who will always struggle.
You can learn how to accept losses by re-defining the meaning of loss. If you equate it with
failure, it will sooner or later take its toll, but re-defining it will help you move forward,
improve your trades and cope with possible losses. Consider losing as positive in the sense
that it will improve your next trades. Find something new. Make the mistake a blip on the
radar, don’t over-react, and let it come and go with ease.
Locked Patterns
The second most important trading challenge is the innate human characteristic of patterns.
Here is an example of a trader with a locked-in pattern:
He keeps making the same mistake when trading. When asked to describe the mistake, he
will do so in detail. When he is told not to repeat the same mistake again, he says he can’t
help it. Although he intellectually knows he should stop making the mistake, he can’t. He
keeps repeating it and as a result, repeats his losses over and over again, too.
You go long and the market immediately goes down.
You go short and the market immediately goes up.
You start shaking, sweating, get short of breath.
You are ready to throw your computer out the window and jump out yourself.
And the market has only been open for 30 minutes.
What is going on?
You are in a trading psychology spiral.
Breaking a Pattern
Getting up and moving is the fastest way to stop a pattern.
Go for a walk and come back.
Check if you followed your system.
See if your system needs any improvements and apply them.
Stick with your system and accept that days like this do happen.
Trade smaller amounts until you make profits again.
It’s important to avoid bad patterns at any cost. Do whatever it takes to break them.
Blocked Emotions
Finally, the biggest and most dangerous of the three problems is emotion.
When a trader gets over-emotional about a trade at anytime, he can’t think clearly because
emotions take control over his common sense. Emotions will cloud judgment, block clear
thinking, and therefore prevent the trader from being creative. To sum up, emotions override
logical thinking.
This is how you know you’re having an emotional block: you want to trade and also react in a
certain way but you simply can’t, and even though you intellectually know what you want to
do, you tend to react differently.
Locked Emotions
Our emotional strengths and peak mindset are shaped by how and what we think. If we
generate bad thoughts, they will affect the overall thinking process – but if we input positive
thoughts, the output will also be good.
The best way to exclude emotions is to ask the mind a good question. Such questions force
the mind to release emotion, as it shifts to finding the answer to that particular question. Also
remember this: should you not be able to control what you are doing; the onset of a strong
emotional block is likely. In such cases, you will need additional help to release it.
Be Cool
Markets change, new opportunities arise and the old ones fade away. Good traders are
professional but humble people – this is why they keep learning. Speculators get paid for
buying what nobody wants, when nobody wants it, and selling what everybody wants, when
everybody wants it. Remember that there is no such thing as a bad trader. On the contrary,
there’s only well-trained traders or badly trained traders.
Conclusion
You will be more successful when you learn to control your emotions. These are strong
words of advice first offered by trader Edwin Lefevre in his book entitled Reminiscences of a
Stock Operator in 1923. This book is well worth a read to any trader.
Be cautious, be cool and be patient! Wait for the right conditions in the market before
entering it. Sit tight when you are losing, do not let fear grip you, have courage in your
convictions. Detach yourself from your emotions at that point and focus on your trading
system. It would also help if you detach yourself from your computer screen! If you have
placed your stop loss it is not necessary to be constantly watching the screen! This means that
you are unsure of yourself.
Don’t be afraid to let go of a losing position. Do not add to a losing position! It is best to
average up not down. So, add on winning positions instead of on losing ones! New
opportunities will always arise.
The bottom line is that having the right attitude and the right mindset will make you more
successful in trading!