Perfectionism: There is no perfection in trading
as far as making money on every trade or having a perfect system. All you can
hope to be perfect at, is following your system, rules, and trading plan. A
winning trade should be measured as one in which you followed all your preset
guidelines. Even the best traders only average about a 50%-60% win rate at best
over long periods of time. The key is having bigger winners than losers, not
being perfect. Like in baseball where a .300 hitter can get into the hall of
fame. A .500 trader in the market can become wealthy if his wins outpace his
losses.
Fear: Faith in your system is the
only way to overcome your fear of trading. You must complete testing on your system until you know that you have a valid edge over the
market in the long term. You must see opportunity in trading not possible losses.
You must take your systems trade signals each time and if you can’t overcome
your fear of loss and failure then perhaps trading is not the best profession
for you.
Pride: We are not our trading account
and staring at our profit and loss too much is a major detriment in
one’s trading. Traders must cut losses at their predetermined stop, not
pridefully hang on trying to prove they are right. We must separate ourselves
from the trading. A person’s value is not tied to a trade or performance record.
If we followed our system then we can’t view that as a personal loss. Our
system failed us.
Impatience: Wait, take your entry signal when
it is time and not a tick before your system triggers the trade. It’s important
let our profits run their course and not prematurely take them until the trend
has run it’s course. We need to give our trades room to breathe and not cut our
loss until the system confirms it is time.
Greed: Traders should not chase a trade
when it is to late. We must take our profits off the table when it is time and
we should never allow a winner to turn into a loser. If this happens you have
nobody else to blame but your greed greed. Over trading and trying to make more
money when our system does not say it is time is born of greed and usually ends
with a negative p&l statement.
Anger: Do not get mad at yourself.
Learn from your mistakes and move on. Every mistake gets you closer to
learning what you need to do to become consistently profitable. Do
not get mad at the “market” it is a voting machine and not an entity. Accept
your losses and begin again.
Recklessness: Trading to big of a position size
is risky, reckless, and completely unnecessary. Only enter appropriate
sized trades with planned stop losses and then trailing stops to lock in profits
while they are there. Follow your system and rules and if find yourself hoping
and wishing the stock would stop moving against you instead of making decisions
based on facts, you should exit that trade immediately.
We need to first realize what trading
“sins” we are guilty of, then we can decide to repent and no longer commit
them.
No comments :
Post a Comment