Category: Psychology

January 21, 2008

Anything is possible in Forex

Filed under: General, Paper Trades, Psychology - 21 Jan 2008

Forex is all about how to hit the next ball correctly rather than worrying about something of a distant future. The next ball may be for 2 pips or 20 pips or 200 pips or 500 pips depending on a trader?s style.

Anything is possible in Forex.

I am useless as a daytrader. Corrections may take days or longer to complete.

Good quality info is everything in this game.

Bottom picking in the Usd/Jpy is the Mother of all risky trades.

We learn how to trade till we stop trading and we learn from each other everyday. That is the beauty of trading and life in general.

Do not worry about what market will do. Just worry about what you will do when market reaches your “pain point” or “happy point”. You will have an easier life as a trader that way.

Forex players can operate quietly, but they cannot hide their moves in those charts.

Good morning. Yes, no liquidity and no conviction by players make the market look like a vagrant loitering in his usual area. Good forecasts and trades.

Good sleep is essential for good trading but most of the traders I know of seem to sleep with one eye open.

January 9, 2008

Closing my winners too soon

Filed under: General, Paper Trades, Psychology - 09 Jan 2008

I had a problem - closing my winners too soon. The problem here is that you are trading the “price” and not “order flow”. I actually had the same problem, and after some mentorship, i learned that i was trading the “price”and not the “order flow”. You are exiting positions simply because of a price/target is getting printed, and not because the order flow is changing.

Try to focus on the order flow (example: if its a bull market, try to find signals that tell you that the order flow is starting to go bid, then exit, dont just exit because its hitting a certain price number).

December 7, 2007

The Effort Effect

Filed under: General, Psychology - 07 Dec 2007

Great article. This is the paragraph that caught my attention:

“Cloninger has trained rats and mice in mazes to have persistence by carefully not rewarding them when they get to the finish. “The key is intermittent reinforcement,” says Cloninger. The brain has to learn that frustrating spells can be worked through. A person who grows up getting too frequent rewards will not have persistence, because they’ll quit when the rewards disappear.”

This makes me think of the records of many great performers, whether traders or athletes such as Roger Federer or Michael Jordan. They all had to confront massive frustration, and win that battle first before moving on to new heights. Embrace the TumbleRoger spent 3 years losing match after match, many of them in the first round before he dug his heels in, made a 180 turn in his attitude (he used to yell, throw his racket like many, even pros, still do today) and developed his groove. MJ had to overcome the negative praise of his coach who told him he wasn’t good enough for his high school team to go practice countless hoops in his yard. Michael Marcus, or Mark Cook both had to blow up and learn to deal with failure before etching the neural paths in their brains that would allow them to keep their risk small and stay in the game long enough to reap the profits.

I think this is what it comes down to: some traders will learn to deal with failure and others won’t. It seems that success is really contingent on the trader’s response when he is in that dark pit of a drawdown, he either fights back and develops proper trading/mental skills or gives up immediately/slowly. The brain has to learn that frustrating spells can be worked through and I think it takes time for those neural paths to be etched in. No wonder pros usually say it took them years before things started to click. But that’s why they’re pros, they had the risk control skills and persistence to keep at it through the learning curve. The majority cannot do this.

Those coming from a ’smart’ reputation and prior success in previous businesses are particularly disadvantaged, because of the reasons stated in the article.

July 2, 2007

What is a trend?

Filed under: General, Psychology - 02 Jul 2007

What is a trend?

wikipedia:
Market trends reflect the general direction of prices or rates in financial markets.[1] Participants in a given market use price charts to observe these trends, and to identify investment and trading opportunities.

…have been searching far and wide for a book, site, page, trader who can define a trend. Nothing and none have lived up to the task… I have read many books and none have been able to answer my question either.

Ed Seykota answered(?):

Part of the problem you may be having in defining a trend is that trends do not exist. Like the past and the future, a trend is merely an idea. There is no such thing in nature. Trend is an idea about the overall average historical direction of prices; trend is a convenient way to view history; trends do not indicate the direction of prices in the moment of now, or even exist in the moment of now. Furthermore, The methods you use to define trend (to view history) are entirely up to you, so you get to define trend any way you wish; everyone may have a different idea of “the” trend. Let’s say you make a graph the volume of air in your lungs. If you define trend by the one-second average, your air volume trend may change several times per minute. If you define trend by a 90-day average, then your air volume trend may gradually increase for several decades and then decrease.

From my side want to say I`ve also noticed a few trends in nature…

- oranges tend to be the color orange,
- lions tend to eat smaller animals when they get hungry,
- when grey clouds roll overhead there’s a strong tendency to rain,
- to sail around the world you need to trend in one direction to make it,
- to get into space the best way to go is in a straight line … UP.

June 28, 2007

Trading is a psycho-social experiment

Filed under: General, Psychology - 28 Jun 2007

We here are engaged in a grand psycho-social experiment. Traders, once a gregarious genus, fragmented into proto-individuality with the maturation of on-line trading. They reverted from a semiblance of pre-civilized tribal unity to the primal instinct to kill or be killed, to eat or be eaten. What are the impacts on libido, aggression, religion, ego, superego?

Agresivity. Think that the cause is suffering, as well. Somehow suffering doesn’t build character in a trader the way it supposedly does in other arenas of life. Perhaps because it is so easy to blame outside influences and not see the fault in ourselves.
chaos
Is trading that hard? What is hard about A-B-C, or 1-2-3? Trading is actually quite simple, and we only complicate it because we lack the courage to approach it simply. Some of the trading screens we see are astonishingly complex. And multiply redundant, IMO. I think that those who cannot approach the market confidently are like those who cannot approach a woman with confidence. Losers.

Note this isjust an opinion. there`s not an absolute truth…

May 12, 2007

Anxiety and future in the traders life

Filed under: General, Psychology - 12 May 2007

Anxiety is a future oriented emotion. You never will get anxious about events that have already occurred. Suppose we had been anxious about a trade but now it’s over with profit hit or stopped out. We no longer feel anxiety - only feel nothing, or satisfaction, or remorse, or disappointment, or sorrow, or some other past oriented emotion.
Anxiety communicate a message that there’s something in our future for which we need to prepare. This is a vital, a self-protection message.
If you’re anxious about a trade, ask yourself, “What can I do to prepare for this evolution?” Fortunately traders almost everytime have to be prepared only for 2 major events - profit or lose. At a first glance my anxiety is related to a failure.. Only at first glance, cause there is no failure. There is only a lack of knowledge, technique, and experience.
If you’re anxious about your trade - ask yourself, “Is there anything else I need to do to clear this fear, and trust in me?” This might involve additional research, verification, something else. Don`t let the pressure of anxiety to affect you at a higher level. But although we know how pressure can affect us, we may not know how to deal with pressure of anxiety. Or what we do know, doesn’t always do the job.
When confronted with the anxiety in the trading, our natural self-defense system-called the fight or flee syndrome - jumps into action. Developed early in our history to confront the life-threatening problems our distant ancestors faced, like the attack of wild animals or natural disasters, our stress defense system stimulates certain regions of the body to react quicker than normal. The heart beats faster, breathing accelerates, and blood pressure increases. Two hormones are released, cortisol to mobilize additional energy and adrenaline to increase our reflexes, strength, reaction time of our mind. But there is a nail in my head: the same chemicals that speed up our physical responses also suppress the calm, rational parts of the brain.
The result? We tense up. Our emotions take over. We start talking to ourselves, worried that we’ll miss a note, lose track of the thoughts. A trader does not need al of this.
As a short resume: Disappointment, or the fear of disappointment, keeps many people from expecting success. The problem here is that I need to anticipate success in order to succeed. Can you imagine what would happen if a professional expected (was anxious all the time) to fail? Such a fear/thought just never crosses the mind of a truly good trader. An outstanding trader operates “in the zone” fully anticipating, creating in his imagination his own flawless performance.
Definitely, when I feel anxiety about a trade

May 11, 2007

Self is the toughest obstacle to overcome in trading

Filed under: General, Paper Trades, Psychology - 11 May 2007

Trading is about you. Your attitude towards the market and it is more valuable than any hyped system available these days. A system can be a compliment but can never be enough to trade the market successfully.

Take a deeper look and contemplate. We are not trading against the market but with ourselves. This would lead to a question of attitude towards the market. A million dollar question! The inner us. We have to expect this process is hard and painful some times. Trading is all about discipline, patience and heart. We live our lives based on beliefs. Our trading represents ourselves and our values and it takes a lot of inner work to change failure into success, and a lot of discipline to maintain success.
One must conquer himself to conquer the world, a trader must not want to conquer the world, no reason here.
Whoever said it, has gone through great experience and achieved the ultimate reward.

Self is the toughest obstacle to overcome in trading. And it’s the one area that is most avoided. How many sites regarding trading psychology are on the internet compared to the other analysis and trade calls sites? Now take that into consideration as you think about the golden rule of trading…. “ The vast majority of Traders lose.”

The proper psychological mindset will not over come bad trading, but the best setup, pattern etc… cannot be traded successfully without some self-control or discipline.

Which is why so many want to automate a system. But this brings up the underlying problem. Responsibility for ones actions. The Herd wants to do what everyone else is doing and when the herd loses, you hear about Brokers running stops, Bad trades from the call services…

Winning in this business is for the most part a lonely place.

Just a loser thoughts.
Between, last couple of weeks seen a nice up period here…

GOD Bless!

May 7, 2007

Losing streaks

Filed under: General, Paper Trades, Psychology - 07 May 2007

A boring day today and I want to write down few lines about losing trades and losing streaks. In fact, actual for me is “last trade of the week” syndrome (my term). It is happening to me from time to time, after a succesfull week – last trade, usualy on Friday is a losing one; is actual for last 2 weeks, happen before. Re-readed “The secrets to Emotions Free Trading”.

…The biggest reasons people get into losing streaks while trading is because they confuse their losing trades with themselves, you conclude that because you had a losing trade(s), you’re a loser.
Forgiveness
The important thing to remember here is that I am not losing trades. Losing trades are PART of TRADING. There is not a single trader in the world that doesn’t have losing trades. The only way to avoid them is not to trade in the first place. I can not be a successful trader until I take mistakes and losing trades for what they really are. They are simply by-products in the trading game and need to be used to gain learning and understanding. No way do they define as a person. But that is where the big problem comes in. Many people let their losing trades and mistakes to define them. If they’re having trouble and have had a series of losing trades, they start to think of themselves as a loser. They continually think of themselves that way, this kind of thinking will just bring on more of the same.

Forgiving yourself completely is the only way to avoid this trouble. You are not your mistakes and losing trades.
You must put the past behind you and go forward.
Holding a grudge against you only hurts yourself. This is actual for ALL THE THINGS happening in your life and what is an actual rule for your life can not be unactual for your trading.
Forgive yourself, trace a line, close that book, it’s the only way to be successful.

Proven again last week ;-).

Adapted to me,
And inspired from “The secrets to Emotions Free Trading”, thanks to Larry Levin

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