emotional-trading

5 Emotions That Are Losing You Money in the Stock Market

emotional-trading

Chart patterns and trading strategies aren’t enough to make a sustainable profit in the market. You must manage risk. One key part of risk management is learning to change the way you relate to feelings of stress, excitement and boredom. Even the most experienced traders are aware of their emotional pitfalls and how to regulate them.

Emotions are complex, and the result of individual, unique learned experiences. While no book can teach you how to navigate your personal feelings, here are some common emotions that get in the way of traders making money, and some simple strategies you can use to overcome them.

 

Panic

A stock price moves against you and panic sets in. Despite all the studying and preparation you’ve done to prove the upside of a price movement, you feel an urgency to retreat from the position in an attempt to prevent losses. You further contribute to your confusion by watching the price action rise and fall, bar-by-bar. Fear mounts as the stock price moves deeper into the red; so you sell your position at a loss or minimal gain. You look back, and the stock is making a run.

How to overcome it

Change your perspective: even trending stocks will never move in the same direction forever. Prices will fluctuate within uptrends and downtrends.

Regulate your emotions: monitor your emotions through dips and allow gains to mature so you can realize maximum profits.

Preparation: enter every trade prepared with a plan. Set stop losses and stop limits to manage risk and reward. Then, trust your stops and your gut, and give your positions freedom to play out.

 

FOMO (fear of missing out)

A stock starts running and you fear missing out on the gain. The price action is volatile and you’re tempted to ditch your tried and true trading rules in favor of a risky entry. Green bars are growing quickly; so you enter the stock at a position you wouldn’t normally take. You don’t calculate your upside or downside; and you don’t set a stop loss. Now, you’re in the trade and the price has reversed against you.

How to overcome it

Change your perspective: there’s no rush to lose money. A stock will always pull back, giving you a chance to re-enter.

Change your approach: when you feel fear setting in, consider trading a different stock. If one trade doesn’t work out, there are always other opportunities.

 

Overconfidence

You’ve followed your trading strategy and made some big gains. Comfortability sets in and you ditch your discipline. You’re feeling good about your skill set and start to cut corners. One mistake wipes out all of your gains. Now you’re in the red and struggling to recover your losses.

How to overcome it

Get back to the basics: it’s not too late to get back on track. Remain calm and level-headed about your wins and limit losses by backing up every trade with research.

Stop: take a break after you’ve made a significant gain. Review your trading journal, particularly areas where you’ve learned a lesson. Reevaluate your trading skills and ability against those lessons and identify new areas for improvement (you’ll always find at least one!)

Protect your profits: set a maximum account size and protect your gains by taking any profits that exceed your limit.

 

Greed

You’ve made some big gains; but it’s not enough. You want more. You feel manic and have an uncontrollable desire to make more money. Strategic position sizing is a thing of the past as you risk bigger chunks of your account in pursuit of larger, more expensive gains. One trade wipes out half your account.

How to overcome it

Stop; and do something else: when you feel manic energy beginning to mount, take a break from trading and redirect that energy into something else. Exercise is a great way to release energy. If you have more than three losing days in a row, sit out. Don’t trade on vacation or while distracted.

Protect your profits: scale down your position size to limit losses. Protect profits by depositing them into a separate account. Use a consistent stop loss and risk strategy.

 

Chasing the thrill

You’re excited about trading; it’s fun and produces an adrenaline rush. You begin to over-trade, jumping from stock to stock, and strategy to strategy. You’re eager to find a trading style that works for you, but you’re unfocused and your practice is scattered. You never gain mastery of a single method and your account slowly depletes. You decide trading isn’t working and give up.

How to overcome it

Get back to the basics with paper trading: when you feel a desperation to trade a stock, or are simply curious about what it will do, paper trading can be a positive outlet that allows you to explore different strategies while protecting your money.

Focus on improvement: paper trading can also reveal common mistakes and areas for improvement, giving you the space to make incremental changes.

Gain mastery: choose one trading style at the beginning and scale your approach as you gain mastery.

 

Revenge

revenge-trading

 

You did all of your homework, planning and strategy on a stock. You set your target and stop loss. All your indicators are pointing in a positive direction. You feel good about the trade and decide to take a large position. Unfortunately, soon after you enter, the price falls and triggers your stop, only to reverse and make a big run. You’re out of the stock with minimal losses; but now you’re angry. Rage builds and you feel desperate to get back into the stock to recover your losses.

How to overcome it

Celebrate your wins: while you may have lost money on this trade, you can celebrate your execution. You had a strategy, used stops and managed your risk well.

Acceptance: expect the unexpected. Accept your losses and revisit your trading strategy. Perhaps you scale down your position and set a looser stop loss in the future. Dwelling on the loss will only make it feel that much bigger. Pick a new stock;and move on.

Take a break: no winning streak lasts forever. Treat trading like a business — don’t burn out. After a series of wins or loses, allow your mind space and time and rest. Return to trading with a fresh, clear perspective.

 

Regret

You did all of your homework and predicted the trade perfectly. You entered and exited almost flawlessly and with substantial gains. However, you forgot to cancel your stop loss and triggered a short later on. You think this was an easily avoidable mistake and feel embarrassed. Negative self-talk begins to percolate, triggering shame and disappointment. You shut down your computer and decide not to trade for a while.

How to overcome it

Don’t give up: losing is a part of winning; even the best traders make mistakes. Hindsight can be a gift when used as a learning opportunity; allow it to shape your trading for the better. Document your errors and identify actionable steps to resolve them.

Give yourself compassion: you can never eradicate all mistakes; the key is to minimize them. Keep track of whenever you avoid a mistake and celebrate when you learn something new or break a bad habit.

 

Wishful thinking

You spend all of your time in chat rooms reading about stocks other traders are watching. One comment says, “this stock is going to change the world.” Others share the same sentiment; so you decide to take a position. The stock starts making gains right away, confirming the chat room hype. You’re optimistic that it will make an even bigger run. One morning, you wake up to see the stock has gapped down significantly on bad news and you’ve taken a huge loss. Now traders are calling the stock “a piece of crap.” You remain hopeful that someday you’ll recover your losses, but the price falls further and further.

How to overcome it

Do your homework: making money as a trader is about maximizing your probability of winning. Each trader has a unique trading style; and someone else’s strategy may be vastly different from your own. By relying on your own research, you can strengthen your intuition and avoid the pitfalls of bad predictions.

 

To sum it up:

Successful traders find a balance between logic and their emotional intuition. There is no shortcut here; it takes continuous practice and self-awareness. Through preparation and research, you can ground your emotions and assumptions into proven probability, and transform your wishful thinking into real money.

Get out there and crush it!

For real-time insight follow me on Twitter! @Mv3Trader

Comment below with your opinions and questions.

Missed Opportunities, Distractions – Aug 21, 2020

I AM GRATEFUL AND HIGHLY BLESSED! I AM FOCUSED!

PREMARKET ROUTINE & THOUGHTS

  • Meditation done this time without the yoga session, trying out a meditation guide on Audible
  • Feeling energized, calm and ready to trade well
  • Raining outside and I like the ambience of it. Wouldn’t mind a hard rain while I trade
  • Focused and know exactly what I need to do
  • Let’s goooooo!

Remember the setup DOES NOT have to be PERFECT.

TRADING NOTES

09:20 – After today’s session I want to play around with hotkeys. Saw some interesting videos on YouTube about NT8 hotkeys last night

09:25 – Interesting v-shape pattern premarket

09:34 – Looks like we have a lot of buyers sitting at the 470 area. Removed original order to give them another shot at pushing the price higher before attempting to take a quick short. Thinking if we get filled down there we can eat the stops (hard and mental) of the buyers

09:36 – Scalp play worked, runner got stopped out for a small loss overall. [HINDSIGHT CAPITAL] Would have been better to take that one at the break into the wick of the previous candle.

09:41 – Looks like bears are going to have a big fight on their hands this morning. any short play needs to be aggressive at the best price

09:46 – Lack of confidence in the NT8 order but want to pull the trigger so took it in Sierra sim. Still working on my limit order placements

09:48 – Wife being kind of loud rn while cooking.. a little distracting. Need a secret cave to trade in lol

09:51 – Glad I didn’t hold that order in NT8. Would have better to play the price action over the indicators I was looking at. Play still looks long but choppy

09:53 – [RANDOM THOUGHT] Interesting how perspectives change. Friday’s used to be my favorite day of the week with dreadful Mondays.. Now completely the opposite.

10:00 – Distracted myself with making a Twitter post. Psychological regroup

10:10 – Up to this point the pivot point at 469 has been a reliable buy location but could break down if price continues to retest.

10:14 – I made the mistake of allowing myself to get distracted with another livestream on YouTube where they were having a low frequency conversation about coronavirus. Almost got involved but made the better decision to just remove myself from that waste of energy.

10:19 – Potential breakout into ATH above 500 but I don’t like breakout plays anymore.

10:24 – Setup looks so beautiful but the fact that it’s a breakout I passed and now kicking myself. Maybe I can get a retest…

10:30 – SIGNING OUT. TRADE IT EASY!

 

Rob

Mv3 Trader

“Great Trades Come From Within”

 

For real-time insight follow me on Twitter! @Mv3Trader

Comment below with your opinions and questions.

Missed the Train – Aug 20, 2020

THE POWER IS WITHIN!

PREMARKET ROUTINE & THOUGHTS

  • Premarket volume check was done at 09:22
  • Yoga meditation mix done for about 15 mins
  • Had a brief family time this morning before getting started
  • Feeling good feeling great, how are you?
  • READY?! SHIIIIT YEAA!!.. I’M READY!

Remember the setup DOES NOT have to be PERFECT.

TRADING NOTES

09:32 – Not a fan of that first 3 min candle. Sidelining for now… But nice bounce off 261.8% Fib line (screenshot)

09:37 – Bulls jumping out the gate super strong. Feel like I would have needed to be a permabull to catch it. But it’s not part of any of my setups or my plan so I have to sit and wait for my opportunity. Taking this time to check some headlines.

09:41 – Feel like this is a great day for a practice mode session. Will replay it either later on today or over the weekend.

09:46 – [HINDSIGHT CAPITAL] Would have made since to take an aggressive play, looking at the 1 min chart, on the pullback @ 315. #PowerRange

09:55 – [MESSAGE TO NQ] So we just gonna take off with no pullback huh?.. lol

10:01 – Entry possibility notes (screenshot)

10:03 – Stepping away from desk to get some tea. Safe place to take a break since I’m going to be waiting for a while for a good opportunity

10:13 – Eyeing zone 344 – 333…

10:26 – [HINDSIGHT CAPITAL] Could have been at least scalp play at 350 based on 3 min pivot created around 09:48

10:30 – Cutting off video recording here so I can start the process to upload to YouTube and the website. If a trade is place, will post results on Twitter and add screenshot to journal.

TRADE IT EASY!

 

Rob

Mv3 Trader

“Great Trades Come From Within”

For real-time insight follow me on Twitter! @Mv3Trader

Comment below with your opinions and questions.