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According to predictive analytics, even if some of those people end up winning the jackpot, they would prefer spending all that money back into the slot machine. Isn’t it quite interesting?

Q-Table of Contents
Q-Trading Psychology
Q-What is Greed?
Q-What is Fear?
Q-How to Manage Trade effectively?
Q-What is Portfolio Management?
Q-What is 2 percent rule?
Q-What are Money Management Techniques?
Q-Bottom Line

Some studies show that many slot machine addicts wear adult diapers because they don’t want to get up even to answer the nature’s call. Fingers crossed. These machines were designed to exploit the variable reinforcement, which is inherent in human behavior. You may Google later.

.............................................Trading Psychology.............................................

Trading Psychology is defined as any response or action which generates a reward i.e. a person will be motivated to repeat a response if he or she gets a reward for the same.

Humans crave predictability and struggle to find patterns, even in its absence.

Variability is the brain’s cognitive nemesis and our minds make a deduction of cause and effect a priority over other functions like self-control and moderation. This is trading psychology

Variable rewards induce addiction, it keeps our brains occupied.

Learn Trading Psychology in just 2 hours from Market Experts

Let me speculate a bit…

According to Professor Sanjay Bakshi, short-term speculators are like butterflies jumping from one flower to the next because of the presence of a pleasure chemical called dopamine in our brains.

The degree of pleasure is directly proportional to the amount of dopamine released.

Novel experiences like bungee jumping or a one night stand deliver enormous amounts of dopamine to the brain. Another thing which delivers dopamine is unexpected, pleasant surprises.

Day traders get a lot of small amount throughout the whole day.

To your surprise, I want to tell you that a doctor will not be able to distinguish the MRI of brains of a trader who just had a winning trade and a cocaine addict. This is the trading psychology that a trader carries.

You are free to do the experiment.

As today is the first day of the remainder of our lives, so you and I, being a participant of the stock market, should take it seriously.

Also Read: Basic Toolkit for Stock Market Beginners

Thus, predicting that you will continue to read this article, I decide to proceed.

I dug into the matter and found out that it really makes us blind. It persuades us and pushes us into the rat race, i.e. a vicious circle of two emotions “greed” and “fear”.

There is an old saying on Wall Street that the market is driven by just two emotions which are greed and fear.

These two intrinsic emotional states relate the word “uncertainty” to the stock market.

Succumbing to these emotions can have an “utter and deleterious effect” on investors’ portfolios and the stock market.

It’s always better not to advertise our ignorance. So, being a common man, I want to share some common “Gyan”.

.............................................What is Greed?...................................................
It is an inherent nature of human being to crave for more once he or she gets something. This is one of the essential part of trading psychology as well

Please don’t feel alone as a victim, I am with you.

It generates chemical rush through our brains and makes us bias by blocking our logical faculty in the brain. We get addicted to it.

................................................What is Fear?....................................................
An another form of trading psychology is Fear. It is normally characterized as an inconvenient, stressful situation etc.

Also Read: 5 Strategies to Follow When Fear Runs High in Stock Market

One of the most common examples that I can think of now is “Dot-com bubble”, many refer it as “Internet bubble”.

It was created around internet start-up companies, which motivated investors to invest in businesses which had a “dot com” tag.

They became greedy which in turn created further greed which resulted in an overpriced situation, giving birth to a bubble.

For better understanding let me quote Investopedia’s definition of a bubble:

“A bubble is an economic cycle characterized by a rapid escalation of asset prices followed by a contraction. It is created by a surge in asset prices unwarranted by the fundamentals of the asset and driven by exuberant market behavior. When no more investors are willing to buy at the elevated price, a massive selloff occurs, causing the bubble to deflate.”

Please don’t get scared, I can understand that “Fear” is dominating your conscious mind. After the bubble crash, investors swiftly moved out and concentrated on less uncertain purchases.

Believe me, the superfluity of information will drown your head in massive noise if you search Google about the role of greed and fear in the financial world.

To avoid this complexity we can simply create a toolbox named “Risk management”. Though it is beyond the scope of this article to explain you this whole concept. A whole course can be developed based on it.

...................................How to Manage Trade effectively?........................................
As this article focuses on money management, my target is to create a basic understanding of it

It is an integral part of risk management.

A trader will not be able to survive for long without it.

It deals with the question of survival. It increases the odds that the trader will survive to reach the long run. Many potentially successful systems or trading approaches have led to disaster because the trader applying the strategy lacked a method of controlling risk.

It is better to stay on the shore instead of getting drowned in the vast ocean. Hope you agree. Thanks for nodding your head.

A carpenter’s toolbox may make or break furniture. Likewise, a money management can make or break a trade.

Assuming you to be familiar with the term portfolio management. If not, no problem. Go on reading…

.......................................What is Portfolio Management?.........................................

According to Investopedia “Portfolio management is the art and science of making decisions about investment mix and policy, matching investments to objectives, asset allocation for individuals and institutions, and balancing risk against performance. Portfolio management is all about determining strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats in the choice of debt vs. equity, domestic vs. international, growth vs. safety, and many other trade-offs encountered in the attempt to maximize return at a given appetite for risk.”

You don’t have to be a mathematician or understand portfolio theory to manage risk. Hence, keeping aside all complexities we will approach it here on a relatively simple level.

Please take a deep breath and go through it…

According to Larry Hite, a famous hedge fund manager, we should-

Never bet our lifestyle – never risk a large chunk of your capital on a single trade, and
Always know what the worst possible outcome is
Let me share some general money management guidelines by John J Murphy. These guidelines refer primarily to futures trading–

Total invested funds should be limited to 50% of total capital
Total commitment in any one market should be limited to 10-15% of total equity
The total amount risk in any one market should be limited to 5% of total equity
The total margin in any market group should be limited to 20-25% of total equity

...........................................What is 2 percent rule?..............................................

2 Percent rule suggest that never risk more than 2% of your capital on any one stock.

Breakdown of 2 percent rule :-

At first focus on your capital at risk, i.e. 2 % of your trading capital
To get the maximum permissible risk you should deduct the cost on your buy and sell i.e. brokerage
Calculate risk per share. To calculate risk per share case of long, you should subtract your stop loss from the buy price and keep a provision for slippage
In case of short, you should reverse the process, i.e. subtract the buy price from the stop loss before adding slippage
To arrive at the maximum number of shares, divide the maximum permissible risk by the risk per share
There is a famous maxim, “More the sweat in training, less the blood in war.” Likewise, you should always “Plan your trade and then trade your plan.”

Trying to win in the markets without a trading plan is like trying to build a house without blueprints – costly (and avoidable) mistakes are virtually inevitable.

A trading plan simply requires combining a personal trading method with specific money management and trade entry rules.

Krausz considers the absence of a trading plan as the root of all principal difficulties traders encounter in the markets.

Driehaus stresses that a trading plan should reflect a personal core philosophy.

He explains that without a core philosophy, you are not going to be able to hold on to your positions or stick with your trading plan during really difficult times.

If you want to know more about money management and trading psychology you can enroll for NSE Academy Certified Technical Analysis.

................................What are Money Management Techniques?..................................

Maximum gains, not the number of wins

Eckhardt explains that human nature does not operate to maximize gain but rather the chance of a gain. The problem with this is that it implies a lack of focus on the magnitudes of gains (and losses) – a flaw that leads to non-optimal performance results.

Pull out Partial profits

Pull a portion of winnings out of the market to prevent trading discipline from deteriorating into complacency. It is far too easy to rationalize overtrading ad procrastination in liquidating losing trades by saying, “Its only profits.” Profits withdrawn from an account are much more likely to be viewed as real money.

....................................................Risk control...................................................

Minervini believes that one of the common mistakes made by novices is that they “spend too much time trying to discover great entry strategies and not enough time on money management”. Strictly follow the below mentioned steps –

Stop-loss points
Reducing the position
Selecting low-risk positions
Limiting the initial position size
Diversification
Short selling
Hedged strategies
Always remember that “you must be willing to accept a certain level of risk, or else you will never pull the trigger”.
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