Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

Rande Howell

The Final Frontier:

Recommended Posts

The Final Frontier:

Navigating the "Mind"field of Trading Without Blowing Up

 

“Now that I have had struggle after struggle for months and have had many losing months, I no longer wish this to go on without some tools to deal with the patience required to wait for strong setups, the courage to make the entry, the discipline to set the stop and hold it, and the impartiality to sit and wait for the trade to develop to its target. The system is still solid gold but I am holding it back.”

 

The only difference between this trader and many other traders is that he had been successful for a while before his trading took a nose dive. That very success gave him a false sense of confidence that later came back to bite him. His mood felt “so right” that he did not question whether he was in the right mindset to trade or not. He inexplicably sabotaged his trading. This is not a trader who set out to incrementally blow up his trading account. But that is what happened anyway.

 

What is it about the mind that creates such problems in trading?

 

On the surface, trading looks like any other skill that a person learns and becomes proficient in. All a trader has to do is to apply the methodology he or she has learned and risk is managed. But the actual performance of trading is different. There are many traders who know how to trade when risk of loss is not involved, but fall apart when their knowledge is put to the test when trading "live".

 

The first blunder a trader makes (and our friend from above made) is to assume that the mind and emotion are separate from one another. Many traders are advised by well-meaning teachers to “leave their emotions at the door” when they trade. Just how do you do this?

 

You don’t. But traders have a tendency to maintain a deception where they believe they are capable of this. The belief “feels” right and is not reality tested. The “feeling” right (more about this later) and a sense of certainty clouds the mind – no matter what evidence is presented to the contrary. This is called cognitive dissonance. Then comes the collision between these ungrounded beliefs (rooted in the feeling of certainty) and their performance in trading.

 

Beliefs, no matter how much they “feel” right, are severely tested for effectiveness in trading. Many people act from beliefs that are never put to the test until they get into trading. And then they are confronted with the observation that the beliefs that they bring to trading do not allow them to move from a certainty-based mindset to a probability-based mindset. And without a probability-based mindset, dealing with the uncertainty involved in trading will trigger fear as the emotional base for thinking while trading.

 

The brain has deceived the trader’s mind. The brain was never designed to separate uncertainty from fear. But it is designed to produce a sense of certainty, even if the assumption is wrong, so that the brain does not have to experience the discomfort of uncertainty. To the brain, uncertainty is fused with the fear of death. This is where most traders stay stuck.

 

Emotion and Cognition Are Linked

 

What neuro-science has convincingly demonstrated is that emotion and thinking are embedded into one another. Your thinking (as well as your memory) is emotional- state-dependent. If you change the emotion, you also change the quality of both thinking and memory. Emotion encodes the way a memory (and your thinking) is filed. Ask a person to remember an event that was encoded while angry and they will have a difficult time even finding the memory to retrieve while in a calm state.

 

And the person’s memory has been filed in the mind in such a way that it is accessed from that emotional state. Take an example of a couple having an argument. A woman, while angry, will have access to all the memories of everything her spouse has ever done wrong while in a state of anger. Years disappear and she can remember things that the man has long forgotten. And she piles on these memories. This is emotional-state-dependence showing up in memory retrieval and thinking. This same phenomenon occurs in a person’s mind while trading as well.

 

When the anger subsides, a different picture emerges. No longer in anger, she does not biologically have easy access to those memories. The file of memories is encoded to be accessed while in the emotional state of anger. When not in anger, she no longer has direct access to those memories. They simply do not appear in the mind unless the emotional state that they were encoded in becomes the emotional state that determines her state of mind.

 

This becomes a mine field, waiting to be tripped, when applied to trading. Few traders bring the understanding into their trading of how brain, emotion, mind, memory, and thinking interact with one another. And without this understanding, and new skills built upon this understanding, an important tool for building a mindset for trading is lost and they stay in a faulty belief that emotion and thinking are separate – because it “feels” right. The trader may believe that they are separate, but their trading account shows a different story.

 

The Over Confident Trader Sabotaged

 

Now let’s take a look at our trader friend and also take a deeper look at the mind driven by emotion. Initially the trader quoted in the vignette came to me because he was not making enough money. He was profitable, but he felt (notice the feeling state that distorts perception) that he should be doing much better. Once he had determined that he was already making between 2-3% return per month on his trading account (and this was a standard level of return that most traders would aspire toward), he was no longer motivated to build a mindset.

 

He “felt” certain that he could do much better. In his studies he had read about what typical returns are for traders, but his mind (under the influence of the feeling of certainty) discounted this information. His trading had produced a euphoria that, in his mindlessness, had seduced him into the feeling of certainty that he should be doing better. Cutting down to his core motivations, he wanted to prove himself by his performances in trading. He wanted to be wealthy and prove to the world (and his long-dead parents) his worth. In his mindlessness, he was confusing external validation of the self by performance with the internal validation of the self of his being. This was his second blunder.

 

The moment that a trader uses his performances in trading as an indicator of his worth as a human being, he is in trouble. This is a faulty assumption to base your beliefs about self worth upon. Trading is a not a measuring stick of your worth. Trading is a performance. It is a performance that requires a stable and trained mindset to produce success, but it is only a performance – and not a measure of a person’s worth.

 

In this trader’s case, his early success in trading actually generated a feeling of euphoria that he mistook for confidence and worth that was based upon performance. The early success filled up a hole in his internal sense of self worth that made him “feel” triumphant. As an emotional state that is short term in nature, the “feeling” of worth that came from his performances gave him a sense of certainty about his worth.

 

The feeling component of an emotion will do that. Feeling is the subjective experience of the emotion and it creates a sense of certainty in whatever direction the emotion is wired to take you. Fear will create a feeling of certainty in the domain of doom. Greed will create a feeling of certainty in the domain of expansive possibility. That feeling for our friend in the vignette became exuberance and euphoria. Out of that exuberance came the certainty of the belief that he was going to win, and win more. It made him “feel” like he mattered in the short term as an emotion will do. It also short circuited his capacity to think in the long term and in terms of probability. That feeling of exuberance compromised the possibility of discipline, impartiality, and patience.

 

Before he knew it, the need to prove himself to others through trading had taken its toll on his trading account over a period of months. Humbled, and no longer deceived by greed or exuberance, he became set to look at the self limiting beliefs that his desire to prove himself by performance were rooted in.

 

Self Limiting Beliefs Become the Stumbling Block in Your Trading

 

Our friend’s problems in trading are rooted in his need to prove himself externally to others. He does have passion for trading – he truly loves it. But his psychology has fused performance with his being. He, like many traders, is blind to what drives his motivations while trading. The four self-limiting beliefs that need to be observed and transformed are: (1) A sense of inadequacy, (2) a sense of not mattering, (3) a sense of unworthiness, and (4) a sense of powerlessness.

 

When you trade, what are you trying to prove? Many traders will say that they got into trading so that they could become rich. What will being rich prove? Notice that, for most, money becomes a short term fix to fix up a psychic hole rooted in “feelings” of inadequacy, not mattering, not being worthy, or powerlessness.

 

If you trade to absolve these self limiting beliefs, the feelings will come back again to haunt you. As you learn to trade from a position of being alive in the performance and challenge of trading, a very different state of mind engages the uncertainty of trading - a state of mind that learns from mistakes and does not see losses as indicators of his or her worth...but only as indicators of his or her current level of competence to trade. And competence in trading, both psychological and methodological, can be learned.

 

At this moment the trader is moving beyond trading from the “feeling” of self limiting beliefs and into a peak performance state of mind built for trading. Trading becomes an art and science to master – not a measure of a person’s worth or power.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • KDLY Kindly MD stock watch, pullback to 1.7 support area with high trade quality at https://stockconsultant.com/?KDLY
    • PLTR Palantir Technologies stock, watch for a local breakout at https://stockconsultant.com/?PLTR
    • Date: 6th March 2025.   The Euro is on The Rise But Is the Currency Overbought?     The Euro rose more than 4% over four days making it the currency’s best performance since COVID lockdowns. The upward price movement is primarily driven by the European bond market which saw its worst day since the 1990s. However, investors are now evaluating whether the Euro is overbought.   Why Is the Euro Increasing in Value? The Euro's rise is driven by the EU's new ‘re-arm’ plans, announced by the European Commission President. This is in response to the US suspending military aid to Ukraine. Analysts believe increased military spending will strengthen the Euro in the short term, but its impact may fade, especially if the Ukraine-Russia conflict ends. The US is looking to achieve this by halting aid and no longer sharing military intelligence.     In addition, the German Bond fell and witnessed their worst day in almost 30 years. As a result the higher bond yields also continue to support the Euro. Currently, the Euro Index is trading 0.09% higher and is only witnessing a decline against the Japanese Yen. However, the price movement of the Euro will also depend on the European Central Bank and potential Trump Tariffs. Economists remain convinced that Trump's tariff threats are serious and will be imposed on the EU. Just last week, he announced that Washington will impose 25% tariffs on Europe-made ‘cars and all other things’. On April 2nd, Washington plans to introduce another round of ‘reciprocal’ tariffs, adding to those already in effect. Germany remains particularly vulnerable, as a large portion of its industry relies on exports to the US. This can potentially have a negative effect on the Euro and the European stock market.   Is the European Central Bank a Risk for the Euro? The European Central Bank is due to announce its rate decision this afternoon and conduct a press conference thereafter. The ECB may potentially aim to calm the market after German Bonds took a hit. If the ECB remains dovish and also reassures the market of the Eurozone’s fiscal and monetary policy, the Euro can retrace in the short term. Analysts currently advise today’s ECB meeting will most likely be the most interesting in years and the most unpredictable. Markets are expecting a rate of 2.65% from the ECB. Analysts at Morgan Stanley believe the ECB will maintain its "dovish" stance in March and April to support the economy, especially as inflation slowed to 2.4% in February from 2.5% the previous month, nearing the 2.0% target. If the ECB advice rates are likely to continue falling in 2025, the Euro will struggle to maintain bullish momentum.   EURUSD - Technical Analysis and Indicators The EURUSD is still witnessing indications of bullish price movement on the 2-hour chart and fundamentals also support the upward price movement. However, simultaneously, the price is obtaining indications the currency is overbought in the short to medium term. The EURUSD is trading above the overbought level on the RSI and is obtaining a divergence signal on most timeframes.       Therefore, the possibility of the price being overbought and retracing remains, but the price action will depend on the ECB. Until the ECB’s rate decision and press conference, the average price at 1.08000 will be key as it has been so far today.   Key Takeaway Points: The Euro surged over 4% in four days, its best performance since COVID lockdowns, driven by European bond market turmoil. The EU’s ‘re-arm’ plans and rising German bond yields boost the Euro, but US tariffs and ECB decisions may impact its trend. The ECB’s upcoming rate decision and monetary policy stance could shape short-term price movements, with a dovish approach expected. Despite strong fundamentals, RSI overbought levels and divergence signals suggest a possible retracement, depending on the ECB. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Michalis Efthymiou HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • PDYN Palladyne AI stock, great day off the gap support area at https://stockconsultant.com/?PDYN
    • MRNA Moderna stock, nice day with a rally off the lower 30.6 double support area, from Stocks to Watch at https://stockconsultant.com/?MRNA
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.