Cultivating discipline and self-control is vital for consistent and profitable trading. You implement proven trading strategies, over and over, so that across a series of trades, the strategies work enough to produce an overall profit. It’s like making shot after shot on the basketball court so as to accumulate a winning number of points. The more shots you take, the more likely you will amass points. But the winning player is the person who first develops the skill to make the shot consistently, so that at every possible opportunity, the ball is likely to go through the basket. To a great extent, consistency is the key. If the player uses one approach one time and a different approach at another time, performance is haphazard.
It’s the same for trading. One must trade consistently, following a specific trading plan on each and every single trade. This allows the law of averages to work in your favor, so that across the series of trades, you will make an overall profit. If you follow the plan sometimes and abandon it at other times, you throw off the probabilities. Suppose you used a strategy that had a track record of 80%. Under the best-case scenario, you could only expect to win 80% of the time. But since history doesn’t always repeat itself, it’s likely that you will win less than 80% of the time. If you don’t execute the trading strategy the same way each time, you will decrease your winning odds. And fewer winning trades may mean an overall loss. That’s why discipline and self-control are so important. (more…)
Archives of “best case scenario” tag
rssTop Ten Side Effects of Greedy Trading
- 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 because 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 not to the real path of hard work and experience.
Ten Side Effects of Greedy Trading
- 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.