Psychology & Risk: POST 7
We talk constantly about managing risk – cutting losses, sizing positions right. And that’s crucial, absolutely. But here’s a dirty little secret of trading: managing winning trades psychologically can be just as hard, if not harder, than handling losers. This brings us back to that all-important Risk/Reward Ratio (R/R) and why our brains often sabotage our profits.
Quick recap from the Beginner’s Guide Understanding the Risk/Reward Ratio: R/R is just comparing your potential profit (Reward) to your potential loss (Risk, set by your stop). A 1:3 R/R means you’re risking $1 for the chance to make $3.
Simple math, right? Aim for trades where the upside is way bigger than the downside. Easy peasy? Ha! If only our brains worked that way.
Why We Choke on Winning Trades
- Loss Aversion Bites Again: Remember that fear of losing is stronger than the joy of winning? As a profit grows, that fear morphs into “Fear of Giving It Back.” It screams, “Lock it in NOW before it disappears!” This makes us snatch tiny profits, killing our potential R/R.
- The Siren Song of Certainty: Money in the account feels real. An open profit feels uncertain, risky. Our brains crave certainty, so we grab the small, sure thing, even if our plan aimed for much more.
- Impatience Strikes: Holding a winner takes patience, just like waiting for an entry. We get restless. “Okay, made a little money, let’s find the next trade!”
…And Why We Cling to Losers Like Grim Death
- Hope: The Most Expensive Emotion: As a trade goes red, hope whispers sweet nothings: “It’ll come back… just needs a little room…” This toxic hope, fueled by loss aversion (not wanting to feel the loss), makes us ignore our stop loss rules.
- Ego, Ego, Ego: Taking a loss feels like admitting defeat, like saying “I was wrong.” Our ego hates that! So, it cooks up excuses to hold on: “The setup is still good; the market’s just being dumb!”
- Anchored to Failure: We get stuck on our entry price or how much we thought the trade could make. This makes it incredibly hard to accept the current reality: the trade isn’t working, and it’s time to cut bait according to the plan.
The Cold, Hard Math: Expectancy is King
Here’s the deal: long-term trading success isn’t about your win rate alone. It’s about your Expectancy – what you can mathematically expect to make (or lose) per trade, on average, over time.
Think of it like this: Expectancy = (How often you win * How MUCH you win on average) – (How often you lose * How MUCH you lose on average)
- You can make money winning only 40% of your trades IF your average winner is, say, 3 times bigger than your average loser (1:3 R/R).
- You can make money with only a 1:1 R/R IF you win way more often than you lose (like 60%+).
- BUT… if you consistently take small profits (low average win) and let your losers get big (high average loss), you can win 7 out of 10 trades and still lose money overall! Let that sink in.
Rewiring Your Brain for Profitability:
- Trust Your Targets: If your pre-trade analysis gave you a logical profit target (based on support/resistance, chart patterns, whatever your plan uses), have the discipline to aim for it. Let the trade work or get stopped out. If you want to protect profits as it moves, learn to use a trailing stop properly.
- Your Stop Loss is Your Friend: It’s not a sign of failure; it’s your pre-planned eject button that saves you from catastrophe. When price hits it, execute. No hesitation, no second-guessing. It’s just business.
- Think Probabilities, Not Predictions: You are not a fortune teller. You’re executing a strategy that has a statistical edge over many trades. Stop trying to predict the outcome of this one trade. Let the probabilities work in your favor over the long run. Don’t interfere based on fear or greed about this single instance.
- Track Your REAL R/R: Your journal is crucial here. Don’t just log the setup R/R; log what you actually got. Are you consistently hitting your targets? Or are you bailing early? Why? This data tells you exactly where your psychology is messing with your math.
- Talk in “R”: Start thinking about trades in terms of “R” – your initial risk amount. “My target is 3R.” “I got stopped out for -1R.” It helps detach from the raw dollar figures and keeps the focus on the risk/reward structure of your plan.
Getting your head right around risk and reward – having the guts to let winners run according to plan and the discipline to cut losers without drama – is absolutely fundamental. It means fighting some powerful ingrained instincts. But nailing this? That’s how you build a positive expectancy, and that’s the only way to win this game long-term.
- What’s Next? How do you figure out if you are cutting winners short or letting losers run? How do you spot these psychological patterns? Your trading journal holds the answers. Let’s talk about using it as your personal shrink.