- Greed causes the trader to only look at the best case scenario for profits and ignore the worst case scenario for losses in every trade.
- Greedy traders trade WAY to big a position size.
- A Greedy trader’s #1 priority is getting rich quick while ignoring the risk of ruin.
- Traders that are greedy tend to believe they can have returns bigger than the best traders in the world right at the beginning.
- Greed makes traders have absurd targets for their trades.
- Greedy traders tend to buy stocks that are down 50% believing they will double and go back to where they were.
- Greed distorts a trader to focus on the money not the homework involved to make the money.
- Traders take trades where the odds are way against them becasue of the greed of wanting to make huge returns on one trade. (Far out of the money options)
- Greedy traders trade with no plan and no method they are just pursuing profits randomly.
- Greedy traders are always looking for the easy path to money to the real path of hard work and experience.
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Six Rules of Michael Steinhardt
1. Make all your mistakes early in life: The more tough lessons you learn early on, the fewer (bigger) errors you make later. A common mistake of all young investors is to be too trusting with brokers, analysts, and newsletters who are trying to sell you something.
2. always make your living doing something you enjoy: Devote your full intensity for success over the long-term.
3. be intellectually competitive: Do constant research on subjects that make you money. Plow through the data so as to be able to sense a major change coming in the macro situation.
4. make good decisions even with incomplete information: Investors never have all the data they need before they put their money at risk. Investing is all about decision-making with imperfect information. You will never have all the info you need. What matters is what you do with the information you have. Do your homework and focus on the facts that matter most in any investing situation.
5. always trust your intuition: Intuition is more than just a hunch — it resembles a hidden supercomputer in the mind that you’re not even aware is there. It can help you do the right thing at the right time if you give it a chance. Over time, your own trading experience will help develop your intuition so that major pitfalls can be avoided.
6. don’t make small investments: You only have so much time and energy so when you put your money in play. So, if you’re going to put money at risk, make sure the reward is high enough to justify it.
Discipline
Dramatic and emotional trading experiences tend to be negative. Pride is a great banana peel, as are hope, fear, and greed. My biggest slip-ups occurred shortly after I got emotionally involved with positions.”
Ed Seykota
I don’t buy what I like, I buy what I can sell later at higher price.
Unless you are Buffet and capable to accumulate enough shares to impact management, your shares are just pieces of paper and you should treat them like such.
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It’s the greed factor that corrupts the way people think in this business. Unfortunately, I needed a 6 fig loss to remind me how stupid greed can make a person. Needless to say, from here on, or until I recover some of these losses, trading will be disciplined.
Never Trade bigger than you can handle Mentally – Emotionally-Financially
For Those Who Invest ,Buy & Hold
A Trading Journal Is Like Sex
So why is keeping a trading journal like sex? Well it’s because…
“When it’s good, it’s really really really good!… and when it’s bad, well, it’s better than nothing.”
Now, we’re not just saying this to get some laughs – this is trading, we take trading seriously, and we take the above statement seriously.
There is information out there on keeping a trading journal – but not nearly enough as there should be.