Fear, hope and greed are probably the
three most common emotions traders deal with. Holding on to losers,
exiting too early, or jumping in before confirmation are just a few examples of
the things we do when emotion manages our trades for us. Trading without
well-defined boundaries can be tempting, especially when things like intuition
and “gut feeling” are things we take pride in as human beings.
We’ve all heard stories about how
someone’s gut instinct helped them to avoid a dangerous situation or how
someone’s intuition led them to make a perfect decision with little or no
substantive information to guide them. As powerful as these abilities may
be in our human experience, I’ve learned that they have no place in
trading. I have found that what we perceive as gut instinct or intuition
while trading is usually just fear, hope, or greed in disguise.
I address these three specific emotions
using three boundaries:
1. Stop Loss- At what price point is my
idea proven wrong?
This boundary addresses the fear of
realizing a loss.
2. Time limit- How long do I give this
trade to work?
Hoping that a trade will eventually
work out as price goes no where only ties up capital that could be used for
better trades.
3. Target- At what price point does my
idea come to an end?
Having a clear target for your idea
keeps you from being greedy (Exiting the majority of a position at the target
and letting profits run on the remainder is an effective way to address greed
with winning positions).
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