adamsarticles.com adamsarticles.com
   Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> ToS :> Place Your Link :> Add Article
Search:   
Free 3 way links
 

Property & Agents

Adventure & Sports

Travel & Accommodation

Online Shopping

Business & Services

Employment & Careers

Issues & News

Hygiene & Health

Medicine & Treatment

Automotive

Art & Culture

Fashion & Lifestyle

Computers & Software

Recreation

Science & Research

Politics & Government

Academics & Learning

Self Enhancement

Society & Issues

Home Family & Garden

Food & Recipe

Teens & Children

Finance & Banking

Online & Board Games

 

  Index Page » Finance & Banking » Forex Trading
   
 

Impatience Will Kill the Golden Goose

   

It is relatively simple to create a profitable system for trading forex, stocks, or commodities on paper, but it is not easy to successfully implement the system once it is created. While the primary forces underlying market behavior are fear and greed, the primary cause of unprofitable trading is IMPATIENCE, which may very well be a subset of both fear and greed.

A profitable trading system requires three basic elements and three fundamental characteristics. The basic elements are a strategy for entering positions, a strategy for protecting positions from unacceptably large losses, and a strategy for exiting positions with a profit. The fundamental characteristics of a profitable trading system are that winning trades are on average larger than losing trades, that the number of winning trades is larger than the number of losing trades, and that the frequency of trading signals is high enough to keep the attention of the trader focused on trading. (Of course, there can be successful variations on these fundamentals: for example, a system that produces 95% winners could have the average win much smaller than the average loss and still be profitable).

Once a profitable trading system is created, the traders inability to follow the rules of the system is the primary cause of unprofitable trading, and IMPATIENCE is one of the driving forces behind a traders inability to follow the rules.

Impatience will manifest itself in all of the following ways:

A trader will follow a new trading system to the letter and begin to get good results, but will see ways that each individual trade could have had a better outcome by bending the system rules just a little. So, instead of being satisfied with X amount of income from the system, the trader will decide to try to achieve 2X income by changing the system rules on the fly, which always results in errors in judgment caused by fear and greed (which the system was designed to eliminate by its carefully formulated rules).

A trader will see an entry signal forming (almost, but not quite it needs Y action to manifest on the next bar before the signal becomes valid) and decide to enter a position on the supposition that the signal will trigger soon, anyway. Of course, the system was designed with black and white entry triggers, and violating these entry rules results in the arrival of bad behavior ruled by fear and greed.

A trader will wait for hours (or days or weeks, depending upon the systems time frame) for a proper signal to form and become frustrated by the lack of action on a slack day (or week or month . . .) and begin to talk herself into believing that a given scenario represents a valid signal, even though all the proper elements are not quite there, and enter positions that are doomed to failure because the market is just not in the correct mode for the system during that time.

A trader will hold a winning position too long because he expects one trade to make up for the previous losing trade (or trades) in one swift move that is outside the parameters of profitability expected by the system.

A trader will take a profit too soon because the market is taking longer to reach the systems profit objective than she is comfortable with.

A trader will take a position much larger than the systems risk parameters allow for because he wants to make a big profit quickly (often to try to make up for serious previous losses caused by violating other system rules), but then when the market goes against him he will panic and exit with a loss before the system loss point is hit because the pain of holding the over-sized position is too great to bear. Then, she will scream in frustration as she watches the market turn around and move back to profitability soon after she takes her premature loss.

These just begin to illustrate the danger posed by impatience if a trader cannot keep it under control. Meditation, frequent breaks from the market, a clearly defined trading system and a clear set of profitability goals (Forex Freedom, by Robert Borowski illustrates a step by step strategy for building capital in a rational manner without impatience) can all help to keep the trader relaxed and trading within the rules, resulting in profits instead of losses.

Author: John Erwin
 
Author Bio:
John Erwin is a reputable writer. John likes to scribble articles about this industry.
This article can be searched using: forex market, foreign exchange rates, forex online, forex training, online forex trading, forex news
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Finding Capital
 
Should Gold Mining Investors Consider Kilgore Minerals?
 
Investing Psychology - Know Thyself
 
Debt Counseling
 
The Pros and Cons of 40-Year Fixed Loans
 
Expense Ratios
 
Tips for Reducing Your Home Owners Insurance Rates that are Quick and Easy
 
Debt Consolidation or Debt Settlement?
 
What is Home Insurance?
 
The Lowdown on United Mileage Plus Visa
 
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> ToS  
© 2006-2008 www.adamsarticles.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.