Posts Tagged ‘Cut Your Losses’

Making Money Is Easy

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

(View The Video Online: Market coach Doug Hirschhorn, PhD, advises traders that making money really is easy. Keeping it, however, is a bit more challenging.)


This week’s trading lesson: Making money is easy. In fact, making money in any market is easy. It’s keeping it that’s hard.

You see, most traders are right about 50 percent of the time. Successful trading really isn’t about how much you make when you are right. Rather, it’s about how much you lose when you’re wrong.

We all know most traders fail to reach their potential because of poor discipline. That’s not new. And as the trading coach to Wall Street’s elite, I’ve been able to pinpoint three common factors that cause that loss of discipline:

  1. Holding a position for a long time and getting out because you’re either bored or lose patience.
  2. Staying in a losing position, thinking it can’t possibly get any worse. Invariably, it does.
  3. Having a winning trade on but being afraid of turning the profit into a loss. You book the trade only to watch it rip in your favor a short time later.

If I just described you, welcome to the party. But don’t worry too much — Dr. Doug has the cure for your trading ailment.

Every day, before you begin trading, look around and see what the price action or the vibe is. Is it quiet? Is it fearful? Is it passive? Is it aggressive? Then I want you to ask yourself one question: “Is today a day to make money or limit my losses?”

Once you have the answer, trade that way. Remember, your job is to make money, not to be right. And sometimes, the best way to do that is to sit on your hands and not lose any.

Think better, invest smarter.

Tiger Woods: Lessons For Great Risk Management

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

(Watch the video online: Market coach Doug Hirschhorn, PhD, discusses the lessons that can be learned from Tiger Woods’ handling of this week’s events.)

So this week, we learned that Tiger Woods is human, after all.
And for the rest of us, his situation is an excellent reminder about how to execute Great Risk Management

Here are Four things I think we can learn from Tiger.

1) Quickly Take Responsibility for your Actions
a. Sometimes you make good decisions and sometimes you make bad ones.
b. Either way it is yours now and you have to deal with it

2) Choose the Lesser of Two Evils
a. When forced to choose between two bad options like whether you should
take a loss on an investment or hold onto that bad investment, choose the less bad option
b. I know it’s hard – but you will live to fight another day

3) Cut Your Losses
a. For Tiger, the hardest thing to do was that first admission of guilt.
b. For the rest of us, the hardest loss to take is the first one.
c. Once you do that, managing the risk of the situation gets a lot easier.

4) Learn From Your Mistakes
a. Mistakes are part of the game. Tiger is not perfect and neither are you.
b. All that matters is that you learn from your mistakes
and move on to the next opportunity.

Tiger is going to be a better golfer, a better person, and even a better dad as a result of what he is going through.
And you know what, if you learn from your mistakes, then you’ll be better too.

If you want to learn more about how to become GREAT, then visit my website at DrDoug.com or pick up a copy of my new book 8 Ways to Great.