Itās said that 85% of people donāt make money trading stocks. Even someone as brilliant as Newton wasnāt spared. Thatās because trading isnāt just about technicals and fundamentalsāitās a game of human nature.
Letās take a look at the five key habits that lead to losses. Which one sounds familiar?
1. FOMO: Sell and then buy againāand always go all-in, never holding cash
The moment you sell, youāre itching to buy something else, afraid of missing out. This is classic greed. But remember: as long as the market exists, opportunities will always come. Ironically, when the real opportunity does arrive, you probably wonāt have any cash left.
2. Wrong take-profit and stop-loss method: Take quick profits but hold onto losing trades
This is a classic retail investor trapātaking tiny profits out of fear, and holding onto losses out of hope. It's a short-term, impatient mindset. When a stock drops, many console themselves by saying, "It's not a loss if I donāt sell." But if the fundamentals have changed, getting out sooner means losing less.
3. No patience: Think the stocks you don't buy is better and then switch
Sometimes when you buy a stock during its consolidation phase, but feel frustrated when it doesnāt rise. Meanwhile, watching other stocks soar feels unbearable, like you're missing out while others cash in. This leads to constantly jumping between sectors, chasing heatāand usually, compounding losses.
4. Buy penny stocks: Ignore market leaders and chase cheap, speculative stocks
People love ābargainsā and cheap stocks, fantasizing about catching a turnaround or reorganization that makes a penny stock soar. But the truth is, leaders are leaders for a reason. Speculative stocks rarely become leaders. Buying them is like betting on a miracle.
5. Betting on the small odds: Catch falling knife
It feels smart to buy something that's fallen sharplyālike youāve found a bargain. But thatās just self-deception. If the bottom hasnāt formed, the dominant trend is still down, and youāre likely catching a falling knife. A 50% drop can still become 80%.
Many people feel personally called out by this listāand thatās the point. These are the traps of human nature. To succeed in the stock market, you must learn to rise above them.
What do you think is the hardest emotional bias to overcome in investing?
Which bad habit do you have in your investing?
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Comments
Iāll admit Iāve also fallen into the trap of taking profits too early while holding onto losing trades for too long. Itās easy to justify a loss by saying āitāll bounce back,ā but thatās usually just hope talking. Now, I try to focus more on the actual fundamentals and stick to my stop-losses.
Overall, Iāve realized trading is more about managing emotions than analyzing charts. Recognizing these bad habits has helped me become more disciplinedāand hopefully, more profitable over time.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG
I prefer to go for blue chips as they have proven themselves. however, there were times where my itchy hands tend to buy those "cheap" stocks (normally 52 weeks low) with the intention of selling them when they rise. thing is, when they rise emotions get the better of me thinking perhaps they may rise further and start holding onto them. till somehow I get "bonded" with the stocks... that isn't good, is it
dangerous to get "bonded" with stock...
Itās said that 85% of people donāt make money trading stocks. Even someone as brilliant as Newton wasnāt spared. Thatās because trading isnāt just about technicals and fundamentalsāitās a game of human nature.
What do you think is the hardest emotional bias to overcome in investing?
Which bad habit do you have in your investing?
leave your comments to win tiger coins~
One of the best examples is Top Glove $Top Glove(BVA.SI)$. This stock is particularly popular during the Covid 19 Pandemic. However its share price has dropped like a rock to the bottom of the ocean.
I should have sold my shares of Top Gloves when it was riding high, but I held on till now, as a reminder of my loss aversion bias when the tide reversed for the stock.
So now I have learnt a valuable lesson on loss aversion and being aware of it helps me to recognise when I am falling into its trap.
@Tiger_comments @Tiger_SG @TigerStars @CaptainTiger @TigerClub

hope I have more patient with better holding power for great companies
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