Trading and Emotions
This is certainly a touchy topic and a bit esoteric when it comes to trading emini contracts. Yet, it remains the most important aspect of trading success, and least understood. Traders simply do not want to discuss their mindset when trading. After all, you follow a system and take the trades and your account piles in the money. Right?
Wrong!
I have read several good books about trading psychology and still find the topic baffling. Why do traders risk capital on trades that are clearly not the set-ups they are accustomed to trading? Is it greed? Is it false subliminal intuition? I think it is both, and trades that are taken for emotional reasons are the trades most traders are likely to ride the longest, regardless of how far out of the money they get. Of course, this is just a personal observation, but having watched hundreds of traders at work, when a trader develops an emotional attachment to a trade it is very difficult to "cut the ties" to the trade and move on.
But why do we develope emotional ties to a trade?
Again, this is a very difficult question to answer, as every trader possesses a different constellation of thought as it relates to trading. Somehow, many traders become convinced that a certain trade "has to succeed" and find it difficult to dislodge that thinking despite the evidence on the chart that the trade is a poor one. Yet, I've watcged countless trade inexplicably ride a terrible trade into the ground after it became obvious they had made a poor decision in entering the trade.
The answer for the problem is to remove your emotions from trading, but this answer is nearly impossible to implement. Our emotions are an integral part of who we are. We are not robots. Yet to trade effectively, one must assume a robot mentality and realize that intuition is an absolutely useless attribute in choosing trades. Good trading is a function of knowledge, experience and self-discipiline and nothing more. I have yet to meet a trader who can spot the unseen set-up where emperical evidence simply doesn't exist. Of course, in the moveis or in books you read about fictional traders who see patterns and set-ups in the market that no one else sees, but that notion is the stuff of fiction. Stick to your system.
The toughest maxim for me to assimilate, at an emotional level is: The market is always right, and I am always wrong. When I am in a trade the market cares little for my expectations for the trade, as the market is essentially a function of the combined psychology of millions of traders, not the psychology of my trading, and when I am on the wrong side of a trade I am, quite simply, wrong. That is, indeed, a tough pill to swallow.
Questions and Answers
On more ocaisons that I care to recount, paper traders completely break down when they start trading real accounts, with real money. They often abandon the disciplined approach they learned trading in a demo account to near madness when they trade real money. Why? That's fairly simple, and it is the most ominous part of the trading process. Real emini trading involves real money, and real money involves real risk
Trading Psychology is one of the least talked about and most important aspects of daytrading. Why don't traders talk more on this topic?
One of the toughest times of my life - that threatened my own psychological wellbeing as well as the potential safety and security of my family - was in early 2004, when I first made the leap from part-time to full-time trading. I had the required knowledge. I had the required...
Day Trading and the Unemployment rate are like siamese twins in a sibling rivalry. They are joined at the hip, whether they like it or not. But unemployment data creates massive market volatility, leading to fantastic day trading opportunities for the informed.
The transition from paper trading in a demo account to trading with a real account with actual money ought to be seamless and very easy. The bad news is that this transition is often disastrous, read why.
Whether you’re a doctor, a basketball or tennis player, a musician, or even a cowboy, knowledge and skills are going to determine your status in your “community” of peers.
The growing Indian market is attracting investors on the ground of the promising and assured return. The online trading is very popular these days and most of the people prefer it for quick money.
Learn the fundamentals of committing cash in Stocks, Ties, Common resources, Merchandise, Actual estate We create Getting Inventory Industry straightforward for you with a comprehensive guide to committing. Any effective stock market buyer must be acquainted with the fundamentals of stock market committing.
Online share trading is one of the most popular financial markets in the world today; however, any people are hesitant in starting due to not knowing a lot about it. This article will help explain what online share trading is all about, how you can get involved for a low initial investment and what to consider before, during and after trading.
The stock market is mostly used to create money. . I am sharing my investment strategy as a retail investor. Most financial experts recommend investors to initially contact a financial advisor. Able to provide advice, it can ensure that the money an investor get a good return or not.
This article has discussed about the importance of Stop orders. Stop orders act like the life jackets
It is not unusual to hear individuals ask about trading the "high probability" gap trades. It seems that there is a perception (by some traders) that e-mini gap trading falls into the sure-fire trade class of trades. Note: I have yet to locate a sure-fire trade in several decades of trading.
I've been writing some about trend lines lately and noted my observation, in several of the articles, of the declining use of this valuable charting tool. I don't have any illusions that a couple of articles by a relatively unknown author will have any effect on the use of these lines; but if just a couple of traders see the value of trending lines and e-mini trading, then I suppose I have done my job.
I like trading indicators that help me understand e-mini trading in real time. I can think of no better real time trading experience than watching price action move toward a known area of support/resistance (SAR) and evaluating what the possible outcomes may be when price collides with support lines or resistance lines.
Given a choice of just one e-mini trading indicator/chart pattern I would select, hands down, support and resistance. In my little world of trading, support and resistance (SAR) reign supreme.
Trend breakouts and breakout volume share two important factors (among a list of other important variables) in shaping the likelihood of a successful trend breakout or breakdown. For obvious reasons, volume in a specific direction is a key ingredient in a successful trade.
