Posts Tagged ‘trading psychology coach’

Trader Psychology Coaching and Money Goals

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Hi, I am Dr. Doug, CNBC’s trading psychology coach. As we all know, goal setting is an essential part of achieving greatness in any line of work. In chapter three of my new book 8 Ways to Great (Penguin/G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2010) I take the process of goal setting a step further by combining my PhD in Sport Psychology with my decade of applied work as a trading psychology coach to the elite.

We all grew up learning about S.M.A.R.T goals.

S stands for Specific.

M stands for Measurable.

A stands for Attainable.

R stands for Realistic/Relevant and

T stands for Timely.

In my work as a trading psychology coach, I learned that this model does not work for the financial industry. As a result, I created the C.H.A.M.P. Goal Setting process for my clients.

C stands for Controllable.

H stands for Hard.

A stands for Accountable.

M stands for Measurable and

P stands for Positive.

The single most important letter in C.H.A.M.P. that frequently gets over-looked is C (Controllable). This means that any goal you set must be entirely in YOUR control. Traders simply do not have control over how much they make. The market controls that. A trader’s job is to identify trades where they have edge and to execute those trades based on their game plan. My job as a trading psychology coach is to keep my clients accountable (that’s the A in C.H.A.M.P.) so they do this on a consistent basis.

By focusing on what they can control, it forces portfolio managers to focus on the process (meaning making high quality trades, doing the right research, sizing the positions properly, identifying risk levels) rather than worrying about the Outcome (how much they make on the trade).

In sports, as well as in trading, psychology is what separates the great from the elite.

Take your game to the next level by making sure all of your goals are entirely in your control so you can focus on the trade and not the money.

Trade well,

Dr. Doug

Stocks and Commodities Magazine Interview with Dr. Doug

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

Here is a link to my interview in the August Issue of Stocks and Commodities Magazine.

Read it and learn why H + W + P = E will change the entire way you trade and think about risk.

Trade well, Dr. Doug

False Beliefs About Trading the Markets

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

Choppy markets can cause investors to bleed out profits. To stay ahead in the trading game, you have to avoid buying into these five common false beliefs about Trading the Markets:

1) What goes up must come down and vice versa.

That’s Newton’s law, not the law of trading. And even if the market does eventully self-correct, you have no idea when it will happen. In short, there’s no point blowing up your account fighthing the tape.

2) You have to be smart to make money.

No, what you have to be is disciplined. If you want to be smart, write a book or teach at a university. If you want to make money, listen to what the market is telling you and trade to make money — not to be “right.”

3) Making money is hard.

Nope. Sorry. Making money is actually easy. Statistically, you’re going to do it about half the time. Keeping it, now that’s the hard part.

4) I have to have a high winning percentage to be profitable.

Not true. How often you are right on a trade is only half of the equation. The other half is how much do you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong. You can remember that with this formula:

Probability (odds of it going up or down) x Magnitude (how much it goes up or down) = Profitability

5) To be successful, I have to trade without emotions.

That is both wrong and impossible. You are human so you have emotions. Emotions can be a powerful motivator to your trading.

When you feel angry or scared in trading, take that emotion and translate it into something more productive. For example, if you’re feeling angry because you just got run over by the market, view that anger as a reason to be more focused and disciplined in your entry and exit levels on the next trade.

Trade Well,
Dr. Doug

Shorting the Euro - Missing the Trade

Saturday, August 14th, 2010