“Everyone wants to feel like a winner. It’s tempting to pat ourselves on the back for making a winning trade, but it’s essential to face the facts: Many times a winning trade is a combination of an astute insight AND being at the right place at the right time. In other words, external circumstances such as plain good luck make you a winner. (more…)
Archives of “position” tag
rssEight Cognitive Biases That Affect Trading
- Loss Aversion – The tendency for people to have a strong preference for avoiding loses over acquiring gains.
- Sunk Costs Effect – The tendency to treat money that already has been committed or spent as more valuable than money that may be spent in the future. (more…)
Cutting Losses
I simply cut my losses and by doing so kept them small. I’ve had my share of bad decisions in my trading career and keeping losses small in order to avoid huge losses is the toughest part.
Why is that so? From a psychological point of view nobody wants to sell at a loss as in most situations in life making mistakes and admitting them is associated with being a loser. That’s why most people prefer sticking to a losing position. They don’t want to be labeled a loser. So they start hoping their position will turn around and end up being a huge winner. The stock then keeps tanking. Then they hope they will be able to sell for a break even. The stock then goes down even more. That’s when being objective and balanced isn’t possible anymore. Losses have become huge and they are trapped.
The cost is simply huge. You lost money. You lost time. There’s an opportunity cost as well as during that time other stocks would have made you a profit. You lost huge amounts of energy as you couldn’t get this stock out of your mind.
Notice I’ve made ample use of the word ‘huge’. Avoid huge losses at all cost. Avoid thinking in terms of huge gains as well. Stay balanced. Stay focused and calm.
MARKET WISDOM
A list of golden sayings and rules I have gleaned from many sources:
- Plan your trades, trade your plan.
- Trade Quality, Not Quantity.
- Keep it simple.
- Don’t look for a reason to enter the market, look for a reason NOT to enter.
- Don’t act due to “Newbie Nerves”
- Don’t make up a trade. If you have to look, it isn’t there.
- Never play with scared money.
- You are not the market.
- Buy dips in an uptrend, sell rallies in a downtrend.
- Do not try to pick tops and bottoms.
- It is only divergence if it came off a retracement – not a sideways market.
- Indicators warn, price action confirms.
- Divergence is early, cross-overs are late.
- You cannot expect your positions to go immediately into the money.
- Divergence means a detour, but not necessarily a new trend.
- No-one knows what will happen in the markets.
- Standing aside is a position.
- Subordinate your will to the will of the market.
- Large ranges beget small ranges, small ranges beget large ranges.
- Once a thing is set in motion, it tends to stay in motion.
- Sniper-rifle, not a shotgun.
- Cut your losses short, let your profits run.
- Only move stops in the direction of your position.
- Do not let a winner turn into a loser.
- Never add to a losing position.
- Forget losses quickly. Forget profits even quicker.
- Consistent behavior equals consistent results.
There are probably more, send ’em in…
Hallmark of a Position Day Trader
The 20 Rules of Trading
- Never, under any circumstance add to a losing position…. ever! Nothing more need be said; to do otherwise will eventually and absolutely lead to ruin!
- Trade like a mercenary guerrilla. We must fight on the winning side and be willing to change sides readily when one side has gained the upper hand. (more…)