How Do You Handle Fear and Greed in Your Trading?
I've been learning about trading psychology, and it's clear that emotions like fear and greed can seriously impact our trading decisions. I'd like to hear from fellow traders about how you deal with these emotions when you're in the midst of trading. What strategies or techniques do you use to keep fear and greed in check and make more rational trading decisions? Your insights and experiences could be a great help to all of us looking to improve our trading psychology. Share your wisdom!
What do you think of the sentence "The initial trading habit of human beings is not trend trading, but buying bottoms and finding highs"?
"Buying the bottom and finding the high" and "following the trend" are two parallel trading ideas. In real life, 90% of people like to choose "buying the bottom and finding the high", and the remaining 10% have also undergone a lot of training and thinking. After correction, you will choose to "follow the trend". Why do we naturally like to "buy the bottom and touch the high"?
Do you feel lonely doing business?
Watching trends and doing analysis until late at night, no one cares about losses, no one applauds profits, good or bad, only you know, are you lonely? Do you enjoy solitude?
As a "trader", what trading discipline do you have to restrain yourself?
Can retail investors make money by imitating the single-handling methods of large institutions?
I found that our retail investors like to fight against big institutions when doing transactions. Why is this? Since it is a large institution, it is generally profitable, so can we still make money by imitating their single-handling methods?Recently, I heard about an institutional order area strategy. As long as you have the ability to identify and discover the order area of an institution, by identifying the trading methods of banks and large institutions, you can follow their footsteps to make money. It sounds reasonable, do you think it is reliable?
