Greed and Fear

Greed and Fear are two of the strongest emotions that can have major influences on our trading behaviours and hence profitability.

We have all experienced these, from the inability to put a trade on to the gut ache seeing money on the table evaporate.

Recently I have been thinking of these two emotions in a different light. What I want to propose is that these two emotions have very different “time-frames” of operation, with respect to trading. Now I have
no detailed research or data to back this up, but I felt I’d put this out there and see what other traders thought…

Fear = Short Term = Most likely to be experienced before or soon after a trade is placed.

Greed = Longer Term = Emotion that plays a major role further into the trade timeline.

My rationale here is that it is FEAR that (some) people feel before putting on a trade, worrying if they should place the trade or not, once in a trade it is FEAR that makes them start hoping that it wont go
against them.

With GREED, I think this starts to come in later. For instance, if the position has become profitable, then starts to loose and become negative, it is GREED for the money that was on the table that keeps you
in the trade, not fear of loss. As it usually takes time for the trade to become profitable, the emotion of GREED by association is the emotion that takes longer to materialise. Indeed, I would argue that when
you think back to the trades ‘that could have been’, you are more likely to remember the trades that ‘could have’ made you a good return, rather than the quick losses you took?