skc
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Some were saying confidence is of no influence - so this paragraph is for them.
So I actually do see confidence as sufficient in itself.
In my trading I can feel when confidence is running low and it will invariably show up as:
-- poor or incomplete fills on limit orders
-- a sudden widening of the spread on the very day my system is telling me to sell
-- an unusual lowering of buyer volume on the very day I'm due to sell
.
?? cant see it.
...explain the mechanism which your personal confidence level affects the volume or buy/sell spread without resorting to paragraphs from "The Secret"?
Brett Steenbarger is not currently publishing any works as he's under contract to a major firm....he's a successful trader (mostly es) and very smart trainer.....you'll learn a lot.....especially once youve dropped that know-it-all stance youre in......
http://traderfeed.blogspot.com.au/
I'm neither a trader nor a psychologist, so this may seem somewhat naive (although I do have an interest in confidence tricks), but aren't these guys just teaching similar things that 99% of other "self help" coaches do, and just calling it "trading psychology"? If you give anyone confidence in themselves they are going to perform better at anything than they would without confidence. I guess what I'm asking is, what do I get from trading psychologist that I wouldn't get from a guy hitting people in the forehead before making them walk across hot coals on late night TV?
I like your avatar btw.
Steenbarger is a trader and a trainer.
Steenbarger is a trader and a trainer....that's the distinct diff, he's in the trenches...
There IMNSHO is your problem.
Expectancy = (Probability of Win * Average Win) – (Probability of Loss * Average Loss)
The easiest, well relatively easiest, way to get your expectancy positive is by working on your 1 in 10 winners that just blow the doors off all your small losses and hugely add to your avg win.
Getting in a trade and just taking the same old target IS the recipe for losing long term...
Remember, support, resistance, range and trend are dynamic. As they shift so to should your approach (stops, targets and size)
Wouldn't it be hard to just give someone confidence when they might not have the skills necessary to pull it off?
I don't think I could have much confidence until my actions/skills have proven to me that I can make it work, therefore skills are far more important IMO. Confidence feeds off the skill set, not the other way around.
(as the thread slowly devolves into best euphemism, best analogy of the year........)
Every example you've put up merely highlights confidence being necessary. The only evidence of it being "sufficient" is your anecdotal observations of newbies being sucessful at trading. Don't forget there's an element of chance in trading - so you can't use the random success of few people to prove anything.
Can you explain the mechanism which your personal confidence level affects the volume or buy/sell spread without resorting to paragraphs from "The Secret"?
I haven't read the Secret, but I have read other similar books. The whole idea became interesting to me when I first found out that thoughts are extremely influential in determining outcome for one's health. In the behavioural sciences and medicine, expectancy (psychological, not statistical) is one of the most powerful determinants of outcome. The large majority of health care providers still believe that their pills and techniques and surgeries and manipulations are making the patient better. Whilst such interventions may have some efficacy on their own, they are rendered completely powerless when prescribed or performed with an attitude of indifference and low confidence. There's heaps solid scientific proof for this.
So this idea of thoughts influencing outcomes: can it be extended to things outside of the body.... things like trading? In terms of evidence, there's not yet a lot of good experimenting going on; it's more like blind faith. But a guy called Rupert Sheldrake is worth a look because he is very strict with his protocols. http://www.sheldrake.org/Research/overview/ There's also this page, which is useful: http://www.sheldrake.org/experiments/expectations/
What I base my statement on is hundreds of personal examples. In terms of trading, anyone can test this idea for himself quite easily. Before you click 'buy', make a note of how confident you feel that the trade will work out profitably, then score that confidence or expectancy out of 10. Write it down for each trade you make. The tricky part is to really understand your feelings accurately. Bravado, pumping oneself up, acting confidently is not the same as real confidence. Then look back after a month or two if you're a frequent trader, that is. You'll see a strong correlation.
The large majority of health care providers still believe that their pills and techniques and surgeries and manipulations are making the patient better. Whilst such interventions may have some efficacy on their own, they are rendered completely powerless when prescribed or performed with an attitude of indifference and low confidence. There's heaps solid scientific proof for this.
Links please? Peer reviewed studies? Not pseudo-science crap thanks.
I've just chunked this off Wikipedia. Let me know if this interests you and I'll go to a bit more effort to find some really juicy stuff.
Whilst such interventions may have some efficacy on their own, they are rendered completely powerless when prescribed or performed with an attitude of indifference and low confidence. There's heaps solid scientific proof for this.
GB you stated
Where is your "heaps of solid scientific proof for this" for what you have STATED?? That is that medical procedures "are rendered completely powerless" without confidence ?
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