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Justification Mode

“The ego is not your friend as a trader. The ego wants to be right, it wants to predict, and it wants to know secrets. The ego makes it much more difficult to trade well by avoiding the cognitive biases that hinder profits.” – Curtis M. Faith

 That quote came to mind this morning when having a conversation with a fellow trader who I think is in what I call “justification mode.”

Justification mode is when traders (or investors) find themselves having to justify poor performance on something that seems logical and which helps comfort and protect their ego without having to own up and face a big mistake.

In this trader’s case, like a lot of people it seems he went and stayed short when the market rolled over last month. Although he won’t admit it to you now, I know from our prior emails he was sucked in by the infamous “death cross” and, in spite of a strong reversal, has now refused to reverse his short (and losing) positions. In fact, his ego is so involved with this short-trade that he’s recently doubled down when the market refused to roll over even using lots of leverage to prove his point. Now he’s in a painful position of being trapped between owning up to the mistake and taking the painful loss or doing what so many tend to do – find a way simply to justify his actions and let a growing loss have the potential to wipe him out entirely.

In our conversation this morning, this trader kept talking about “the market is in a trading range” and “ready to roll over.” That’s fine and well as long as the price action confirms that view, but it hasn’t yet. As I asked him this morning, “Can you afford simply to stay wrong just to protect your ego?” He didn’t know how to respond. In fact, it became clear that he didn’t even realize that his ego was becoming such a strong influence over his entire market analysis. I suspect, as he does as well now after talking to me, that if this trader’s positions were different, for example aggressively long the market instead of short, this same trader would not be seeing a “trading range” or a market “ripe for reversal.” Instead, he would see nothing but more upside potential. This is why human traders, with human egos, are often at a significant disadvantage.

Trust me, at one point or the other, we’ve all done this. I know I have been in justification mode many times even when I didn’t even realize it until much later on. However, over time, I’ve learned to spot to tell tale signs that I’ve fallen trap to this and then have learned to take immediate corrective steps to right the ship. Moreover, as many of you also know, at all times I also trade in a way that makes sure that when I do make mistakes (which are often) that they NEVER have the potential to wipe me out. When your ego gets so involved in your trading, the potential for catastrophic losses are tremendous which is why we’ve all have to learn and know when we’ve fallen into justification mode. (more…)

TRADING WISDOM

1. The market expects you to accept losses.  If you want to play in the market you better be prepared to play by the market’s rules.  Accept the losses, make them small based on proper risk parameters, and the market will consider it a tithe.  Just set it aside and help pay for a pew, not the entire church.

2.  The market wants you to admit when you are wrong.  Commit to admit.  If the market is always right, and it is, then go ahead and let the market know NOW that you understand and accept its omnipotence.  Broadcast it to the heavens and to depths of the earth; broadcast it to your friends and family; broadcast it to your neighbors; broadcast it in every chat room you use to brag in.   Let everyone know you will be wrong more often than right and that you are OK with that.  If the market knows you do not mind being wrong the market will leave you alone.

3.  The market will reward your discipline.  Let’s face it, the market is one disciplined son of a gun.  When it says it is going to crush the bears with their death cross and the bulls with their golden cross it does.  When the market says a bearish economic report does not matter I am going higher anyway it will.  When the market says that cute little support line you drew is nothing but “a lead pencil and I am an eraser”, then erasing it will go.  Stick to a discipline of listening to what the market is saying and the market will whisper its direction instead of shouting its lies.

4.  The market is the calculator.  If you are attempting to reach 10 via the calculator, there are many and various ways of getting there:  5+5, 2+8, 15-5, 25 –15, or even  2 + 2 –1 –1 –2 –2 +3 +3 +3 + 3.  When it comes to making money in the market our calculator may want to make it to 10 much quicker than the market does and we may want to add 5 + 5 to get there but be prepared for the market to take its own sweet time adding things up.  If all that matters is getting to 10, then make sure the road you take is paved with minuses along with pluses along the way or all your money will be going to the 5508 (punch this number into your calculator and turn it upside down to see what it spells), which will make the employee a very unhappy and broke individual.

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