Paperback
Publisher: Traders Press, Inc. (2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0934380910
ISBN-13: 978-0934380911
Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.4 inches
Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
Publisher: Traders Press, Inc. (2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0934380910
ISBN-13: 978-0934380911
Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.4 inches
Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
Roosevelt shares common traits or emotions traders undergo during the course of their trading activities. These common traits are as follows:
1. Fear (versus excitement, intuition or protectionism)
This feeling is a future-based emotion. It can be a fear to start trading or fear to stop loss. It makes a trader lose control and often paralyzes a person. An antidote is to recognise our desires and turn this emotion into a caution-based feeling. This is only possible if one is clear on the aims and strategies laid out beforehand.
2. Greed
This is spurred on more by opportunity cost than anything else. The perception of scarcity distorts the correct view that the market is always there. A solution is always to think of abundance and to exercise caution.
3. Recklessness (excitement seeking or anxiety)
A cure is to be confident and to have a plan. One ought to feel detached and think of the big picture.
4. Perfectionism
This has been ingrained into us since young as we seek for the ideals. We have to recognise that trading is about approximations and not to seek so much control as the market forces are outside us.
5. Pride
Over confidence can interfere with clarity of strategy. We need to be always cautious and learn how to cut loss.
6. Anger
This emotion affects everything else and our mood. We should use it to act on what we can control and do it reasonably. We must not be personal when it comes to trading.
7. Impatience
This is due to opportunity costs as well. We have to learn to wait and to practice timeliness.
Good trading patterns can only be achieved via strong personal character and virtues. This is done by having clarity, calmness, consistency, courage, cautiousness, commitment to excellence and confidence.
This book is excellent in identifying trading sins and dispositions. It helps one to associate one's trading patterns and our own fallacies. At the end of most chapters, there are sections on inventory-taking and on how to adjust. Also, it reveals supporting beliefs so we can learn to incorporate them into our character formation.
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