If you’ve been trading for a while, you’ve probably noticed this:
Most people don’t lose money because they know nothing. They lose money because they keep making the same mistake over and over again.
Maybe you chase when a stock is running. Maybe you panic and sell too early. Maybe you’re good at taking profits, but terrible at cutting losses. Or maybe you make a plan before the market opens, then completely ignore it once things start moving.
So let’s talk about it: What’s your biggest trading weakness? And have you actually tried to fix it? Drop a comment and share yours. It can be a habit, a mindset issue, or a mistake you keep repeating in your trades.
How to join
Comment below and tell us:
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What’s your biggest trading weakness?
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Are you trying to improve it? If yes, how?
Event Dates
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March 20, 2026 – March 26, 2026
Prizes
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Everyone who comments here or posts under the topic gets 5 Tiger Coins.
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We’ll also pick 1 standout comment (most actionable / most relatable) for a bonus gift $Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$
Comments
Warren Buffett has a blunt warning for those of us caught in this psychological trap:
"Selling your winners and holding your losses is like cutting flowers and watering the weeds".
How do I plan to fix this trading weakness?
1. The "Hard Stop" Divorce: Setting a stop loss at entry. If the price hits the line, the relationship is over. There is no "we can work this out" talk.
2. The "Blank Slate Test": Ask the question - 'If I didn't own this weed today, would I buy it?". If not, it is time to cut it off.
3. The "Flower" Pivot : Moving my capital from the stagnant weeds into stocks where growth actually lives.
I am realising that in the volatile markets of 2026, it is important to stop watering the weeds & start feeding the flowers. I will be happier for it.
@TigerEvents @Tiger_comments
Everyone who comments here or posts under the topic gets 5 Tiger Coins.
To improve, I’ve focused on process over outcome—predefining entries, exits, and risk before the trade. I also size positions smaller so I can stay disciplined, and I keep a simple journal to track when and why I deviate. Most of my mistakes still come down to the same triggers: FOMO and the fear of giving back profits.
What’s helped most is accepting that missing a trade is better than forcing one. I now wait for confirmation instead of chasing momentum, and I treat risk management as my real edge. It’s still a work in progress, but my execution is getting more consistent—and hopefully that earns me the bonus from $Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$ 🚀
@TigerEvents @TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub
Overtrading: Entering too many positions out of boredom or a desire for excitement, which increases transaction costs and emotional fatigue.
Ignoring Risk Management: Risking too much of the account on a single "sure thing" or failing to use stop-losses.
Hope Trading: Holding onto a losing position long after the original reason for the trade has vanished, "hoping" the market will turn back around.
Create a Pre-Trade Checklist: Use a physical or digital list that must be checked off before clicking "buy" or "sell". This forces the brain to switch from emotional to analytical mode.
Set Daily Loss Caps: Establish a hard limit (e.g., 2% of your account). Once hit, close the platform immediately for the rest of the day to prevent an emotional spiral.
Practice Mindfulness: Brief breathing exercises before a session can lower stress levels and help you "respond" to market moves rather than "react" impulsively.
Emotional Decision Making: Falling in love causes us to hold on to loser stocks for too long and incur significant losses.
Neglecting Fundamentals: Emotional attachment to a company's "story" or CEO can prevent us from recognizing that the stock's price has exceeded its intrinsic value.
Ignoring Portfolio Diversification: Investors who love a particular stock often fall into the trap of overconcentrating their portfolio in that single, beloved company.
Refusal to Sell Losers: Emotional investors often refuse to sell losing stocks, treating them like "pet" stocks rather than realizing that an investment is a business transaction, not a personal relationship.Thanks @icycrystal @TigerEvents @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG @DailyTradingInsights