CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 75.00% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
Forex trading per day exceeded $7.5 trillion in April 2022 worldwide, while global equity trading surpassed $41 trillion in the third quarter of 2021. But there are many more instruments, such as ETFs, indices and cryptocurrencies being traded every day. Such massive flow of capital into the financial markets highlights the number of daily active traders. Despite access to all the news event updates and advanced technical analysis, every trader traverses a different journey. What distinguishes one trader from another is their trading psychology.
In layman’s terms, trading psychology helps traders to manage gains, losses, risks and their trading plan with equanimity.
Traders need to build a strong trading mindset to remain rational during challenging market conditions. Building a strong trading psyche can help traders to:
Two dominant emotions that drive traders’ behaviours are greed and fear. These emotions give rise to biases that can lead them to make poor trading decisions and spiral into suboptimal trading patterns.
Greed makes a trader take larger positions than their risk appetite, trade more often, and hence overtrade.
Fear, on the other hand, prevents or delays traders from opening positions or forces them to exit prematurely, making them miss out on trading opportunities.
These two emotions give rise to 10 other trading emotions: hopefulness, optimism, false belief, euphoria, nervousness, refutation, terror, distraction, horror and hopelessness.
These emotions can lead to multiple biases that affect trading. Here are some of the most common ones.
This occurs when a trader bypasses logic and technical analysis due to hope. They make trading decisions hoping they will win, rather than strong market analysis.
Past success makes traders believe they will succeed again and greed leads them to ignore technical indicators and market sentiment.
This is quite common with the ever-online Gen Z and millennials due to the information overload. Greed often makes them believe that ALL signals can be and must be utilised, irrespective of their trading strategy.
Often, ego forces traders to believe that the market moved in the wrong direction! This makes them ignore the fact that the market does not satisfy anybody’s needs. It moves and traders need to make their decisions according to these moves.
Sometimes traders tend to believe that the regret of not taking a position is better than the regret of losing. However, missing out on opportunities only leads to dissatisfying trading experiences.
While 58% of investors agree that keeping emotions out of trading decisions improves the performance of their portfolio, 47% find it difficult to practise this. While emotions are only human, controlling strong emotions is one of the critical traits of a successful trader. Traders must never let their feelings push them to behave against what analysis and their trading plan advise. A strong trading psyche helps them do so by enabling them to make rational trading decisions.
Some methods to master trading psyche are:
Understanding your trading personality is the first step to controlling unhelpful emotions. For instance, do you prefer quick ins and outs, or do you like to trade once or twice a day? This can help you identify trading strategies and instruments that will suit your mindset the best. A restless trader with high anxiety cannot wait for days or even hours to see the result of an open position. For them, scalping or high-frequency trading might be better.
Once the strategies and markets that suit your trading persona are identified, it is time to develop a trading strategy. This is the time to quantify your trading goals, risk appetite, capital available, percentage of the capital you are comfortable risking per trade, etc. Trading duration, and break time must also be kept in mind, since trading without breaks can cause burnout and impair judgment.
Quantifying and documenting these aspects give you a way to cross-check whether your trading decisions bypasses any of these trading metrics.
Experienced traders prefer to practice a new strategy, technical indicator or trading a new instrument before entering the live markets. Demo accounts offer a risk-free means to familiarise yourself with the market and the situations where you tend to lose emotional control. You can then prepare a list of market conditions that lead you to behave irrationally and plan how to act when such conditions arise. At such times, you could decide to take a break from trading or continue with your established trading plan.
At this stage, you can refine your trading strategies and align them to your trading psyche. A great way to do this is to maintain a trading journal and track all your trades. It is essential to objectively analyse trading results for each position, session and month. This helps discover weaknesses and trading patterns that do not serve you well.
“Trading doesn’t just reveal your character; it also builds it if you stay in the game long enough.”
~ Yvan Byeajee
Trading mindfully takes patience and practice. As Byeajee says, it builds your character by embedding rational judgment into your decision-making processes. Reading books and learning from expert traders to control your emotions and ensure that trading decisions remain objective can be helpful. That may take some time though.
Dos | Don’t |
Reach for trading goals | Chase Profits |
Snap out of a trading position if your loss limit or trading plan says so | Let hope or greed keep you in a trade longer than you should |
Focus on improving overall trading performance | Focus on making profits on each trade |
Accept, analyse and move on | Argue with the market |
Reason what caused a deviation from trading plan and work on eliminating the behaviour | Try to justify your deviation from the trading plan |
Remain true to your trading plan and follow it | Delude yourself into believing that you stuck to the plan by seeking shortcuts |
Acknowledge the risk potential of each position and ensure that it lies within your risk tolerance level | Ignore profit targets or stop losses just because an opportunity seems to have higher chances of success |
Build confidence in a trading plan that works for you and your trading goals over a long period and under diverse market conditions | Quit your job after making a few successful trades |
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