As humans, we have certain inherent emotional characteristics. The most common is Fear. When we’re put in a situation in which harm may come to us, fear is what triggers us to recoil or seek a safe harbor. It’s almost instinctual that we avoid situations that might cause us pain. This can be either physical (breaking a bone) or emotional pain (trading losses), as they are both experiences we will try to avoid at all costs.
Conversely, we’re attracted (like moths to a bright light) to experiences that give us pleasure. Whether it’s great food, fabulous wine or lengthy vacations to beautiful destinations, to each there own; we desire as much of these as possible. In fact, marketing agencies make millions of dollars (as do Presidential campaigns) by tapping into these emotions of pain, fear and pleasure.
It’s also true, for the most part, that when people are faced with the choice of avoiding pain versus feeling pleasure, they opt clearly for the avoidance of pain. A clear illustration of this concept applied to trading or investing is one I often use in class. I pose a scenario in which an investor owns three stocks: one is profitable, the second is break-even and the last one is trading at a loss. I then ask, “If given the choice to sell one of the three, which one would you sell first?” Invariably, most choose to sell the winner and keep the loser.
Putting off trading losses is an issue that plagues many new traders. To address this issue, let me start by sharing some observations of over 20 years in the trading world. Most people new to trading come by way of marketing campaigns. These marketers naturally appeal to people’s greed (pleasure) – usually glossing over the potential for loss (pain). The irony of course, is that to be successful in trading we must first embrace risk. Translation: we must accept trading losses and reconcile the fact that we will be wrong sometimes.
It’s well known in the trading community that doctors and lawyers make the worst traders because of their inability to accept when they’re wrong. This attribute is great for their respective professions; after all, I want a lawyer working on my behalf or a doctor diagnosing me to possess this “must get it right” type attitude. However, big egos have no place in the trading world. Ego impairs our judgment; it causes us to impose our will on the market, allowing what should have been small trading losses to expand into large losses until the pain becomes unbearable. It’s at this point that the suffering must be arrested; and the only way to do this is by closing out the position. Invariably, this happens just as the market bottoms.
What I show students in class (in an effort to de-emphasize this notion that one has to have a high win-loss ratio in order to make money) is that they should spend most of their time looking for low risk entries. The most important focal point of any trader should be to identify price levels at which he/she can expose the least amount of capital and, if proven correct, reap the most profits. What this does is re-enforces the trading maxim “cut your losses short and let your winners run”.
I find many new traders are content taking small profits, mainly because it FEELS GOOD to do so. However, if you only gain $1.00 for every $1.00 risked, you would have to have a higher than 80% win-to-loss ratio in order to be consistently profitable. This is a tall order for most professionals, let alone a novice. After commissions, taxes and trading expenses the math just doesn’t add up. On the other hand, if you profited 3 to 5 dollars for every dollar lost, you see that even if you’re right only 50% of the time you would still be profitable overall. Incidentally, some of the most profitable (audited) methodologies have about a 40% win-to-loss ratio.
The way to calculate risk-to-reward ratios is quite simple. Say you’re trading the ES (E-Mini S&P) with an 8-tick stop loss ($100). If you’re buying it at a demand level, you should figure your first target would be the next fresh opposing supply level. That supply should be a minimum of 24-ticks ($300) away, if this is not the case, you should consider passing on that trade and wait for a better set-up.
All and all, if you have a proven low risk strategy, and aren’t bothered by taking small losses, and have the mental fortitude to let your winners hit their targets, you can move towards experiencing the pleasure of being a consistently profitable trader.
Until next time, I hope everyone has a profitable week.
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Editors’ Picks
AUD/USD shrugs off losses, retargets 0.7100
AUD/USD partially fades Wednesday’s pullback, managing to regain balance, leave behind the earlier drop to the 0.7020 zone, and trade with modest gains ahead of the opening bell in Asia. Moving forward, the preliminary PMIs will be the salient event in Oz on Friday.
EUR/USD remains offered below 1.1800, looks at US data
EUR/USD is still trading on the defensive in the latter part of Thursday’s session, while the US Dollar maintains its bid bias as investors now gear up for Friday’s key release of the PCE data, advanced Q4 GDP prints and flash PMIs.
Gold surrenders some gains, back below $5,000
Gold is giving away part of its earlier gains on Thursday, receding to the sub-$5,000 region per troy ounce. The precious metal is finding support from renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and declining US Treasury yields across the curve in a context of further advance in the Greenback.
XRP edges lower as SG-FORGE integrates EUR stablecoin on XRP Ledger
Ripple’s (XRP) outlook remains weak, as headwinds spark declines toward the $1.40 psychological support at the time of writing on Thursday.
Hawkish Fed minutes and a market finding its footing
It was green across the board for US Stock market indexes at the close on Wednesday, with most S&P 500 names ending higher, adding 38 points (0.6%) to 6,881 overall. At the GICS sector level, energy led gains, followed by technology and consumer discretionary, while utilities and real estate posted the largest losses.
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