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  • Lyn Summers

    Lyn Summers 10:31 pm on July 29, 2010 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , Greed, , ,   

    Greed and Fear 

    There are only two things at work in the financial markets, greed and fear.  Almost everything that occurs is a result of one or both of these two primal instinctual emotions.  When you boil the markets down to their very essence there is nothing else.

    The financial markets are made up of people buying and selling and these people are motivated by their greed and fear.  On the one hand they are driven by their greed for money and materialistic possessions and on the other their fear of losing what they perceive to be theirs already.

    Greed will tell you to over trade (commit more than your account can afford).

    Greed will tell you, it’s never going down again or it’s never going up again.

    Fear will tell you enter before you should, it will tell you that you’re missing out.

    Fear will tell you to take your profit too soon, for fear of losing it.

    We are all driven by our greed and fear and we drive the markets.

    It’s knowing when to be greedy and when to be fearful that will make you a great trader.

    Steve Arthur – Trader and Trading Coach

     
  • Michael Brook

    Michael Brook 1:51 pm on July 26, 2010 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , , , Trading Success   

    Consistency – When The Rollercoaster Stops 

    Consistency in Trading– When the Rollercoaster Stops.

    Many traders experience trading like a rollercoaster of emotions, especially in their early learning journey. They find themselves in high peaks of euphoria as trades go extremely well. Then they plummet into despair as they are hammered by an uncaring market into a black hole in their trading balance. Trading success comes when a trader can acheive consistent results.

    As time passes, many traders survive the learning journey, either through their own skill or with the help of a mentor or coach. Of the survivors, some learn to smooth the path of the rollercoaster, at least for part of the time. Others, however, do not and they continue to experience extreme highs and lows in their emotions.

    Instead of these traders being in control of their trading, the rollercoaster of the market is in charge of them. As if they were locked into their seats, these traders feel a rush of excitement with every upward move and the dread of impending sudden plunges.

    Riding a rollercoaster may be exciting in the short term, but living on it is exhausting. If a trader is tired and distracted, their attention for the market is limited. If a trader is feeling under pressure, they can miss essential elements of their plan.

    Some proponents of the psychology of trading recommend becoming completely unemotional when trading. However, this is not natural for humans and so takes a lot of attention that could otherwise be applied to trading. Of course, it is possible in the short term, but emotion will leak through and this can be discouraging. Eventually, if you squash your emotions routinely, you can miss intuitive signals and your trading can become pedestrian.

    There is another way.

    If your results are inconsistent, you can bring this within your control. One of the hallmarks of expert traders is consistency in their trading results. They achieve this consistency through a number of ways.

    First, they have a clearly written trading plan that takes into account bull, bear and sideways markets and they recognise signals from the market that indicate when to switch their trading approach between these. The majority of retail traders only trade to the long side and often get hammered when the market goes short.

    Second, they know when to stop trading. If the market isn’t performing the way they would like, or if they don’t understand the market, they have no hesitation in pulling some or all of their positions out of harms way until they do understand. Novice traders don’t know when to stop, but experts do because they have experience.

    Third, expert traders know that when they are off track, either they have had a string of losing trades, or something is going on in their personal life that distracts them and they will alter their trading accordingly to maintain their effectiveness.

    Finally, expert traders are more than happy to back-test a system over extended time periods in order to prove the viability of a system of trading. We know of one trader who back tested a system for 9 months before making a single trade on it.

    What to do if you are getting inconsistent results.

    1. Examine your trading plan. Does it reflect different trade setups for different markets and when you should switch your trading from long to short.
    2. What precise criteria you have that tell you to stop trading? If you don’t have them yet, you should develop them.
    3. What type of trading are you good at? You should be able to say immediately what setups work well for you and in what markets you trade best. Expert traders only do what works for them.
    4. Examine your ability to manage your state of mind. If you have difficulty maintaining your focus you should attend our clear mind training course.
    5. Consider your relationship with risk. If you are taking on too much leverage and risk (your positions sizes are too large) consider reducing your leverage and position sizes until you are achieving consistent results.

    Trading involves risk and each trade has only a probability to success. All the expert traders we have spoken to describe periods of high stress and inconsistent results.

    This can be overcome and there is an unlimited flow of opportunity in every market for the flexible trader who trades with clear mind and a structured trading plan.

    You can learn to achieve consistency in trading. You can learn consistency in managing your emotions while trading and this feeds forward into your results. When you learn effective emotional self-management, the quality of both your on days and off days will improve. You can become comfortable with the occasional roller coaster ride because you know how to handle it.

    Imagine knowing you can let your emotions run free, whatever the market conditions, because you know you can take appropriate action with yourself and the market immediately. This is trusting yourself. It frees you to give trading your undivided attention.

    Your evidence will be more consistency in your trading results, automatic use of the skills in the Clear Mind Trading Course and a trading plan that you trust because you have tested it and it works.

    Once you are consistently achieving the trading success you desire, whether it’s in Forex trading, CFD trading or equities trading,  you can move towards the goals you chose when you first started to trade.

    A useful reference book is Enhancing Trader Performance by Dr Brett SteenBarger.

    Trading success

    Previous Blog

     
  • Michael Brook

    Michael Brook 10:37 am on July 22, 2010 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment
    Tags: , , ,   

    Emotional Stages of a Trade 

    When we think about trader education, most people’s attention goes towards learning to use technical analysis or fundamentals, choosing sources of information and making sense of them with intent to identify potentially profitable positions. The media report changes in the markets and in some of the fundamentals that influence them.

    The trading psychology of traders rarely get a mention, yet these have an enormous impact on individual traders’ results. Emotions influence our capacities to take in information, process it and make functional decisions and the feedback for a trader is instant. We are not proposing that an alert, embodied, flow state will guarantee results by itself, but in combination with a good trading system and plan, it will contribute to effective decision making and hence, profits.

    To foster an understanding of the scale of problems many traders experience with trading emotions, we will outline below the different stages of a trade and events that can happen to induce emotional difficulty for traders.

    Stage 1 – Commencing a trade.

    When novice traders place a trade, there is often a mix of emotions. Excitement may be experienced about the potential for profit; fear about the potential for loss. Hesitation is often experienced if the trader is unsure about trading or about the position. These things can all happen at once or in sequence.

    Psychological research has identified this common thought process. Once a decision is made, whatever the subsequent result, people look for evidence that they have made the “right” decision after they have made it. Their perception of the probability of the identified outcome increases after the decision has been made.

    Once a trade is taken, novice traders often experience the decision as being the correct one.

    Stage 2 – Option 1 – The trade goes into profit

    When a trade goes in the correct direction, novice traders experience a flush of excitement and joy. They were right and they begin hallucinating what they can or will do with the money they will make from the trade. They begin hoping and wishing for it to go higher. The higher and faster it goes up the more excitement they feel.

    Stage 2 – Option 2 – The trade goes into loss

    Hopes are turned to dust as a great idea is smashed by an uncaring market. The emotions generated by this event can range from mild annoyance at the trade not going right, to fearful anxiety, to a complete inability to think.

    Stage 3 – It’s time to get out.

    At the time to get out, traders can be experiencing a mix of emotions. If the trade went well they can extremely joyful. If they got out at a massive loss, they can be filled with panic and intense regret at staying in for so long. Often traders can feel that the market is against them personally. Doubt and self-reproach are common when exiting at a large loss.

    Stage 4 – Post trade emotions.

    The post trade emotions can vary depending on the outcome of the trade. They can vary from wild exuberance and ongoing joy if exiting at a large profit, to devastation and recrimination if exiting at a large loss.

    Regret is a very common post trade trading emotion. Traders often regret getting out if the stock goes on to higher prices. Alternatively, they can regret not getting out earlier if an exit signal was presented and not taken immediately.

    The technical merits of the trade are rarely considered in the aftermath, nor how well the trade was executed. Yet these are essential considerations that support long term trading survival and success.

    You probably recognized some of these experiences from your own trading history. At times it may have seemed that you were the only one in the experience. However, everyone who has traded will have had some of these experiences.

    Key Understandings

    Since different emotions arise at different parts of a trade, it’s possible to predict the likelihood of their occurrence. The emotions that take place at different parts of a trade are occurring at that stage because, without being conscious of it, you have identified something important that is out of place. The natural response is strong sensation around the midline of the body, which may be called excitement when the anomaly is pleasing, or anxiety, regret etc when the anomaly is displeasing.

    For example, the emotion of regret for doing something that cost you money serves a purpose of letting you know not to do it again. The emotion of excitement for making a very good trade serves the purpose of rewarding you to do the behavior again.

    In Summary:

    * Trading Emotions are functional and they serve a purpose.
    * Trading Emotions have repeatable structures and patterns.
    * They are communications from your unconscious mind to protect and serve you.
    * Knowing the patterns enables you to have choice about which emotions to have at what time.

    How to use this information.

    Knowledge leads to choice and functional action. Knowing about yourself and how you respond to your environment allows you to engage the environment and respond to it as you choose, instead of repeating actions the way you were programmed from the past.

    When you appreciate that you may experience different emotions at different stages of a trade, you will be able to notice when they are beginning and not allow them to cloud your judgment.

    Noticing your emotions can also serve as a trigger to focus you back on the technical aspects of your trade.

    After you exit a trade, it can be helpful to reflect on what emotions you were experiencing while entering or exiting the trade. This can assist you in preventing loss making trades in the future.

    When you know your emotions can affect your trading, you can learn to use them deliberately, to help you become a better trader and make your trading more profitable.

    Improving your trading can be assisted greatly by understanding your own emotional patterns and learning effective ways to improve or vary your emotional responses.

    More about us

    Trading State Pty Ltd is a company committed to assisting traders to deal with the emotional aspects of trading and to improve their trading performance. We offer training courses and coaching in state management and emotional flexibility for traders.

    If you think you have had problems with the emotions of trading, you are not alone.

    Together we have over 30 years experience in assisting traders to achieve better performance in their trading and in trading ourselves.

    Whatever issue you have with your trading experience, we can assist you. For more information about us and previous articles on our blog visit our website. http://www.tradingstate.com.au

    © Trading State Pty Ltd. All rights reserved 2010

     
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