- PPF Points
- 4,024
Fear can be broken down into three categories:
1 Fear of Loss
2 Fear of missing good trades
3 Fear of being wrong
Fear of Loss
Trading is like any other business in that losses are a part of the game. But losing over and over again can lead to psychological scarring that can paralyze, and fill the trader with dread when approaching the trading table. As Mark Douglas explains in his classic book ‘The Disciplined Trader’, fear of losing actually leads to losing. Stops are placed too tight, not allowing price action to develop. Trades often pull-back after entry which causes the fearful trader to panic and exit with a small loss to prevent a larger loss. A series of small losing trades will eventually empty the account.
The focus should be on avoiding large losses not on small ones. If you cannot cope emotionally with a small loss, you will miss out on potential large moves because every trade you enter has the risk of turning against you. It is vital to know how much you are prepared to lose in any trade. Another catastrophic action is hoping a losing trade will retrace to exit at breakeven. So often however, this leads to even greater losses.
When fear of loss prevents the execution of trades, the trader’s focus may be largely on results rather than following the forex trading plan. This causes doubt about the reliability of the trading plan which gets in the way of pulling the trigger. And thus, a vicious cycle of self-doubt develops.
To combat the fear of losing, paper trading or trading with small amounts enables you to concentrate on execution of your trading system rather than profit and loss. I advise the latter for if you trade with small amounts of real money you will experience the emotions of the market but at a lower level, and you can gradually accustom yourself to them.
The money you put up is money you can afford to lose, and can be viewed as the cost of education like a college degree.
Pure paper trading does not pull up emotions as nothing is at stake.
When you can trust yourself to execute your trading plan without exception and when you can enter and exit the market with decisiveness and without hesitation, then you can consider going live.
Fear of missing good trades
For the trader, this is almost worse than losing! This can be dangerous because the trader will join the trend at any price. Excitement and euphoria overrule the trading plan with little thought to potential downside risk.
Fear of being Wrong
Focusing on being right rather than making money comes from the traders’ ego. It is the ego that equates the trader’s net worth with his/self-worth which leads to profits being taken too quickly or to exit at break even.
Trading throws up many issues regarding one’s relationship to money. An internal conflict with making money or needing to be perfect can make it difficult to exit a trade at a loss because it damages your self-image of perfection. Or you may have grown up feeling guilty about having money so you subconsciously find a way to give it back to the market. To avoid self-sabotage, the ego has to stop protecting these versions of the self.
Trading is a probability game and there will always be losses. Being a perfectionist is only setting oneself up for failure. If you cannot take a loss when it is small because you have to be perfect, then this loss will often grow and grow into a much larger one.
Making mistakes has different effects on individuals. Bad grades might have caused parental disapproval and you felt small and worthless. We are so susceptible to the feedback from others. When we are children, feedback can have long-lasting and unforeseen consequences. Many of us never fully recover from the emotional effects of being punished for making mistakes. Neural pathways become ingrained in the brain which attach emotions to learning experiences. When these emotions are negative, they interfere with our ability to learn in a healthy and constructive manner.
Your trading plan must account for the emotions you are likely to experience, particularly those related to fear. As a trader you must move from a fearful, apprehensive mindset to one of confidence, one which enables you to learn from your mistakes. You have to believe in your ability to make more money than your losses. That makes it easier to continue to place trades after a string of losing positions.
Successful forex trading is about overcoming the major fears, gain confidence in your trading method and even more confidence in yourself. If the different manifestations of fear can be understood, the trader is well-equipped to turn fear from a destructive force into one of our most vital assets when operating in the market.
1 Fear of Loss
2 Fear of missing good trades
3 Fear of being wrong
Fear of Loss
Trading is like any other business in that losses are a part of the game. But losing over and over again can lead to psychological scarring that can paralyze, and fill the trader with dread when approaching the trading table. As Mark Douglas explains in his classic book ‘The Disciplined Trader’, fear of losing actually leads to losing. Stops are placed too tight, not allowing price action to develop. Trades often pull-back after entry which causes the fearful trader to panic and exit with a small loss to prevent a larger loss. A series of small losing trades will eventually empty the account.
The focus should be on avoiding large losses not on small ones. If you cannot cope emotionally with a small loss, you will miss out on potential large moves because every trade you enter has the risk of turning against you. It is vital to know how much you are prepared to lose in any trade. Another catastrophic action is hoping a losing trade will retrace to exit at breakeven. So often however, this leads to even greater losses.
When fear of loss prevents the execution of trades, the trader’s focus may be largely on results rather than following the forex trading plan. This causes doubt about the reliability of the trading plan which gets in the way of pulling the trigger. And thus, a vicious cycle of self-doubt develops.
To combat the fear of losing, paper trading or trading with small amounts enables you to concentrate on execution of your trading system rather than profit and loss. I advise the latter for if you trade with small amounts of real money you will experience the emotions of the market but at a lower level, and you can gradually accustom yourself to them.
The money you put up is money you can afford to lose, and can be viewed as the cost of education like a college degree.
Pure paper trading does not pull up emotions as nothing is at stake.
When you can trust yourself to execute your trading plan without exception and when you can enter and exit the market with decisiveness and without hesitation, then you can consider going live.
Fear of missing good trades
For the trader, this is almost worse than losing! This can be dangerous because the trader will join the trend at any price. Excitement and euphoria overrule the trading plan with little thought to potential downside risk.
Fear of being Wrong
Focusing on being right rather than making money comes from the traders’ ego. It is the ego that equates the trader’s net worth with his/self-worth which leads to profits being taken too quickly or to exit at break even.
Trading throws up many issues regarding one’s relationship to money. An internal conflict with making money or needing to be perfect can make it difficult to exit a trade at a loss because it damages your self-image of perfection. Or you may have grown up feeling guilty about having money so you subconsciously find a way to give it back to the market. To avoid self-sabotage, the ego has to stop protecting these versions of the self.
Trading is a probability game and there will always be losses. Being a perfectionist is only setting oneself up for failure. If you cannot take a loss when it is small because you have to be perfect, then this loss will often grow and grow into a much larger one.
Making mistakes has different effects on individuals. Bad grades might have caused parental disapproval and you felt small and worthless. We are so susceptible to the feedback from others. When we are children, feedback can have long-lasting and unforeseen consequences. Many of us never fully recover from the emotional effects of being punished for making mistakes. Neural pathways become ingrained in the brain which attach emotions to learning experiences. When these emotions are negative, they interfere with our ability to learn in a healthy and constructive manner.
Your trading plan must account for the emotions you are likely to experience, particularly those related to fear. As a trader you must move from a fearful, apprehensive mindset to one of confidence, one which enables you to learn from your mistakes. You have to believe in your ability to make more money than your losses. That makes it easier to continue to place trades after a string of losing positions.
Successful forex trading is about overcoming the major fears, gain confidence in your trading method and even more confidence in yourself. If the different manifestations of fear can be understood, the trader is well-equipped to turn fear from a destructive force into one of our most vital assets when operating in the market.