Trembling Hand
Can be found on the bid
- Joined
- 10 June 2007
- Posts
- 8,852
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- 205
If you are reacting emotionally like this to an individual losing trade then you have a problem that needs addressing.
Yeh.
Just like baiting the hook when fishing eh.
When you get a bite--what a rush!
Tech and Mike ---- U cant even admit that you get a little pleasure when u close out a good trade for a nice profit ??
OK, I'll admit to these. A nice multi-R winner DOES make me happy...for a short time (since drawdown usually follows), and trading errors (regardless of actual $ outcome) make me upset.
None of these emotions, however, will make me deviate one iota from my trading plans.
OK, I'll admit to these. A nice multi-R winner DOES make me happy...for a short time (since drawdown usually follows), and trading errors (regardless of actual $ outcome) make me upset.
None of these emotions, however, will make me deviate one iota from my trading plans.
Saying those who experience emotions must not have a positive expectancy, is the typical mechanical and book junk.
Those trading a positive expectancy method will see each trade as "Doing Business".
I don't trade hope trades.
Those trading a positive expectancy method will see each trade as "Doing Business".
It will be without emotion.
And thanks for giving the best example of hope in this thread.I'll answer this as well methinks.
Nope, not even for a second. A small loss simply signifies that I'm one trade closer to the inevitable big winner, which invariably comes along when least expected.
But experiencing emotions and 'feeling' is not a cardinal sin of trading as some like to make it out to be.
Yeh, that was my point Chops, but not put quite as well.
lol.
Hope does not mean you don't know what your doing and only have a small chance/probability, but one NEVER knows his exact probabilities or 'expectancy'.
LOL, "Give yourself to the dark side"
:
It's even more simple than that. The word expectatio, which is the basis of our words to do with expectancy, was a replacement for the word spes, meaning hope (de-spes = de-spair, literally, without hope) in the literature to do with probability.
And probability and decision theory was never ever meant to be quantifiable in an open ended 'game' like the markets are.
This dogmatic view that you can apply an expectation onto the future, is absolute pure nonsense. It is the most absurd of all hopes, and the markets in the last 12 months, and Nizar's blog should do more than enough to disprove this sort of nonsense.
There are those that do everything they conceivably do to eliminate this "hope", but all they do is reinforce it. And then there are those that acknowledge it, recognise it, and deal with it.
This dogmatic view that you can apply an expectation onto the future, is absolute pure nonsense. It is the most absurd of all hopes, and the markets in the last 12 months, and Nizar's blog should do more than enough to disprove this sort of nonsense.
This dogmatic view that you can apply an expectation onto the future, is absolute pure nonsense.
What extraordinarily myopic comments! For starters, as far as long term trend following goes in shares, to narrow down to such a short time frame as the last 12 months is egregiously wrong.
isn't it time to adapt,
you can plan as much as you want, but in the end, you cannot be SURE your current profits/expectancy will continue into the future,
What extraordinarily myopic comments! For starters, as far as long term trend following goes in shares, to narrow down to such a short time frame as the last 12 months is egregiously wrong.
I'll agree to the point that you cant be sure or certain but hope alone is no way to look at anything.
If you have a well laid out plan hope isnt or shouldnt be a part of it.
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