montmorencyt2w
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This posting is about the psychology of trading. I am just a man in the street and have no training in psychology, and I am just kicking around ideas here.
1) I think it was Malcolm Pryor who wrote that when your trading account gets to a certain size, it can affect the way you trade, e.g. a large pot can make you a bit more reckless and greedy, so basically only keep a certain amount there, and when you make a large win, transfer some out into somewhere safe (e.g. Icesave ... ), to keep the trading balance constant.
I have to say that after one winning streak, I did notice something of the sort. Started increasing my £ per point, and then wondered why the losses were increasing at such a rate of knots.
2) Sell versus buy. I have seen it written that people find it easier to buy than to sell (i.e. easier to go long than to go short), even though in principle, it shouldn't be any more difficult, if the direction of the market is clear.
Has anyone actually found that? Again, I think I have done, even when trading in a market where the short direction was the obvious one. Part of it is probably that falls in price just tend to happen more rapidly than rises in price, but is there any more to it than that?
Do any Brits feel unpatriotic shorting the pound, or Americans shorting the dollar?
(I don't, I should say right away ).
1) I think it was Malcolm Pryor who wrote that when your trading account gets to a certain size, it can affect the way you trade, e.g. a large pot can make you a bit more reckless and greedy, so basically only keep a certain amount there, and when you make a large win, transfer some out into somewhere safe (e.g. Icesave ... ), to keep the trading balance constant.
I have to say that after one winning streak, I did notice something of the sort. Started increasing my £ per point, and then wondered why the losses were increasing at such a rate of knots.
2) Sell versus buy. I have seen it written that people find it easier to buy than to sell (i.e. easier to go long than to go short), even though in principle, it shouldn't be any more difficult, if the direction of the market is clear.
Has anyone actually found that? Again, I think I have done, even when trading in a market where the short direction was the obvious one. Part of it is probably that falls in price just tend to happen more rapidly than rises in price, but is there any more to it than that?
Do any Brits feel unpatriotic shorting the pound, or Americans shorting the dollar?
(I don't, I should say right away ).