You’re probably familiar with bullish and bearish market conditions, but what do theseanimals mean when it comes to trading style? Various animals define specific trader characteristics. You could be a bull, wolf, or even a sheep. Read on to find out which animal best describes your trading style.

 

Bulls and Bears

The bull represents an optimistic trader who believes that the market will continue its upward trend. The bear is the total opposite of the bull. It’s pessimistic about the future and is convinced that the market is headed for a fall. 

 

The other animals - Pig

A pig is any trader who likes trading big and often while disregarding sound trading strategies and principles. The pig normally has a lofty profit target, large position size, and trade time frame and doesn’t know when to exit a winning trade. Pigs are greedy, impatient, and emotional traders who often take on too much risk. They are on the look-out for hot trading tips that will allow them to make money fast,but often this approach often has the opposite effect.

 

Whale

This trading animal represents the big traders and market movers with a substantial amount of capital. The whale often attracts many piggybackers who may see increased profits when they trade alongside the right whale.

 

Shark

A shark’s main concern is making money so it gets into trades, makes money, and gets out. The shark thrives on simplicity and has little interest in complicated trading theories and methods. 

 

Rabbit

This animal avoids overnight or long-term risk and only takes the opportunity of making quick profits during the day. The rabbit takes a position for a very short time and the typical trading time frame is that of minutes.

 

Chicken

A chickenis any trader who is driven by fear and is too worried about losing money to take on any risk. This trading animal avoids large trades and typically sticks to conservative instruments such as bonds and bank deposits.

 

Sheep

A sheep likes to follow the crowd andexperts. This type of trader doesn’t change their trading style to suit market conditions. Theyusually don’t developtheir owntrading strategies and will often piggyback on others trading methods. The sheep often misses out on meaningful market moves because it’s usually the last one out of a downtrend and the last one into an uptrend.

 

Wolf

The wolf is the opposite of the sheep. A wolf thrives by trading at the market turning points or when there is “blood on the streets” and is normally trying to get on the opposite side of the sheep. Wolves are powerful traders who sometimes use unethical means to make money. For example, Jordan Belfort, whose life was depicted in the Hollywood movie ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ was a wolf who defrauded people with his penny stock operation and stock market manipulation.

 

Stag

This trading animal is a short-term speculator who only looks out for opportunities and has no interest in bull or bear markets. A stag moves in and out of positions quickly and tries to profit from short-term market movements.

 

Turtle

A turtle is unconcerned with live action and is more interested in the end-of-day results and weekly activity. The turtle likes being on the right side of the big trend but is typically slow to sell or buy and only trades for the long-term. This trading animal tries to make as much as possible from the least amount of trades.

 

Ostrich

The ostrich represents traders who bury their heads in the sand during bad markets. Ostriches will ignore negative news and they tend to disappear during bear markets only to reappear when the markets improve.

 

Making your trading style work for you

Regardless of your trading style, successful trading requires a thorough knowledge of the markets, discipline, and a robust trading strategy. Undisciplined traders can be slaughtered on the markets if they are unaware of capital preservation, taking profits, and cutting losses.


This material on this website is intended for illustrative purposes and general information only. It does not constitute financial advice nor does it take into account your investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs. Commission, interest, platform fees, dividends, variation margin and other fees and charges may apply to financial products or services available from FP Markets. The information in this website has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. You should consider the information in light of your objectives, financial situation and needs before making any decision about whether to acquire or dispose of any financial product. Contracts for Difference (CFDs) are derivatives and can be risky; losses can exceed your initial payment and you must be able to meet all margin calls as soon as they are made. When trading CFDs you do not own or have any rights to the CFDs underlying assets.

FP Markets recommends that you seek independent advice from an appropriately qualified person before deciding to invest in or dispose of a derivative. A Product Disclosure Statement for each of the financial products is available from FP Markets can be obtained either from this website or on request from our offices and should be considered before entering into transactions with us. First Prudential Markets Pty Ltd (ABN 16 112 600 281, AFS Licence No. 286354).

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD looks offered below 1.1900

EUR/USD looks offered below 1.1900

EUR/USD keeps its bearish tone unchanged ahead of the opening bell in Asia, returning to the sub-1.1900 region following a firmer tone in the US Dollar. Indeed, the pair reverses two consecutive daily gains amid steady caution ahead of Wednesday’s key US Nonfarm Payrolls release.
 

GBP/USD slips back to daily lows near 1.3640

GBP/USD slips back to daily lows near 1.3640

GBP/USD drops to daily lows near 1.3640 as sellers push harder and the Greenback extends its rebound in the latter part of Tuesday’s session. Looking ahead, the combination of key US releases, including NFP and CPI, alongside important UK data, should keep the pound firmly in focus over the coming days.

USD/JPY drops toward 155.00 as focus shifts to US data

USD/JPY drops toward 155.00 as focus shifts to US data

USD/JPY meets fresh supply and inches closer toward 155.00 in the Asian session on Tuesday. The Japanese Yen holds the upper hand over the US Dollar after Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi led the ruling Liberal Democratic Party to a historic landslide win and on intervention talks. Traders brace for key US economic data that could offer more clues on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.


Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD meets initial resistance around 0.7100

AUD/USD meets initial resistance around 0.7100

A decent rebound in the US Dollar is behind the AUD/USD’s daily pullback on Tuesday. In fact, the pair comes under modest downside pressure soon after hitting fresh yearly peaks in levels just shy of 0.7100 the figure on Monday. Moving forward, investors are expected to closely follow the release of Chinese inflation data on Wednesday.
 

EUR/USD looks offered below 1.1900

EUR/USD looks offered below 1.1900

EUR/USD keeps its bearish tone unchanged ahead of the opening bell in Asia, returning to the sub-1.1900 region following a firmer tone in the US Dollar. Indeed, the pair reverses two consecutive daily gains amid steady caution ahead of Wednesday’s key US Nonfarm Payrolls release.
 

Gold the battle of wills continues with bulls not ready to give up

Gold the battle of wills continues with bulls not ready to give up

Gold remains on the defensive and approaches the key $5,000 region per troy ounce on Tuesday, giving back part of its recent two day. The precious metal’s pullback unfolds against a firmer tone in the US Dollar, declining US Treasury yields and steady caution ahead of upcoming key US data releases.

Bitcoin's downtrend caused by ETF redemptions and AI rotation: Wintermute

Bitcoin's downtrend caused by ETF redemptions and AI rotation: Wintermute

Bitcoin's (BTC) fall from grace since the October 10 leverage flush has been spearheaded by sustained ETF outflows and a rotation into the AI narrative, according to Wintermute.

Dollar drops and stocks rally: The week of reckoning for US economic data

Dollar drops and stocks rally: The week of reckoning for US economic data

Following a sizeable move lower in US technology Stocks last week, we have witnessed a meaningful recovery unfold. The USD Index is in a concerning position; the monthly price continues to hold the south channel support.

RECOMMENDED LESSONS

5 Forex News Events You Need To Know

In the fast moving world of currency markets where huge moves can seemingly come from nowhere, it is extremely important for new traders to learn about the various economic indicators and forex news events and releases that shape the markets. Indeed, quickly getting a handle on which data to look out for, what it means, and how to trade it can see new traders quickly become far more profitable and sets up the road to long term success.

Top 10 Chart Patterns Every Trader Should Know

Chart patterns are one of the most effective trading tools for a trader. They are pure price-action, and form on the basis of underlying buying and selling pressure. Chart patterns have a proven track-record, and traders use them to identify continuation or reversal signals, to open positions and identify price targets.

7 Ways to Avoid Forex Scams

The forex industry is recently seeing more and more scams. Here are 7 ways to avoid losing your money in such scams: Forex scams are becoming frequent. Michael Greenberg reports on luxurious expenses, including a submarine bought from the money taken from forex traders. Here’s another report of a forex fraud. So, how can we avoid falling in such forex scams?

What Are the 10 Fatal Mistakes Traders Make

Trading is exciting. Trading is hard. Trading is extremely hard. Some say that it takes more than 10,000 hours to master. Others believe that trading is the way to quick riches. They might be both wrong. What is important to know that no matter how experienced you are, mistakes will be part of the trading process.

Strategy

Money Management

Psychology

Best Brokers of 2025