spin85 23 posts msg #121930 - Ignore spin85 |
11/6/2014 1:33:28 PM
looking for some feedback. Thanks!!
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karennma 8,057 posts msg #121937 - Ignore karennma |
11/6/2014 2:57:02 PM
Actually, for me personally, it's the reverse ...
my trading affects my mood, which is why sometimes, I have to take very long breaks.
The last one lasted several months.
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Kevin_in_GA 4,599 posts msg #121940 - Ignore Kevin_in_GA |
11/6/2014 4:00:00 PM
I find that the results of recent trading activity influence me - I am more cautious entering new trades after a string of losses and more likely to be less cautious after several good trades in a row. That's human nature I guess, and why I try to use purely mechanical strategies as much as possible.
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guspenskiy13 976 posts msg #121941 - Ignore guspenskiy13 modified |
11/6/2014 4:58:29 PM
Your mood and trading are two interconnected entities.
just as Kevin said, the better I trade - the more arrogant and less cautious I become. While you really need to stay humble no matter what you achieve.
Unfortunately our mind has biases.
There is representation bias - we assume that the daily bar chart is the market or our favorite indicator is the market.
It comes with reliability bias - we assume that something is accurate - while it may not be.
There is lotto bias - we want to control the market and we focus on our entry, where we can force the market to do lots of things before we enter; but unfortunately when we enter - the market is going to do whatever. The golden rule of trading has nothing to do with entry.
There is conservatism bias - we see patterns where none exist and easily get convinced that they have a meaning; once we believe we have found a pattern and become convinced that it works - we will do anything to avoid evidence that it doesn't work.
There is randomness bias - we assume that markets are random and have many tops and bottoms - - but even random markets can have long streaks.
There is gamblers bias - we tend to think that the probability goes up for a win after a losing streak or up for a loss after a winning streak.
There is "conservative with profits and risky with losses ratio bias" - we tend to take profits quickly and give losses some room.
There is "my-current-trade-or-investment-must-be-a-winner" bias - which is at the root of all biases. Being right has nothing to do with making money.
We don't trade or invest in the markets, - we trade or invest according to our beliefs about the markets. - Van Tharp.
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Personally, in my observations I've noticed:
1) If I'm impatient to buy or sell something - I probably shouldn't do it. When I really want to trade - that usually results in poor timing and sometimes completely wrong decisions. I'm not saying that you shouldn't want to trade - but there shouldn't be any hype in the decisions - which often comes when, for example, you don't have any positions.
2) I plan well ahead all of the opportunities - but I try to focus on multiple instruments rather than one or two. I believe that decreases the chances of having any biases - I do not "over-think" as I'm focused on diverse price-actions. IMO it's really easy to develop a bias when you have a plan to trade this single instrument in the way you want it - and you just sit in front of one chart all day.
3) Lastly, I think that I should only trade when I'm in the neutral mood. Complete calmness, even apathy. With that mood and zero biases, supported by a good plan/objectives....you get pretty good odds.
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