â¤ď¸Love is my biggest trading weaknessâ¤ď¸I tend to form emotional attachment and forget to cut my loser stocks while they âwill not love me back". We Should Not "Love" Our Stocks For 4 reasons. 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 inves
weakest weakness is fall in love and all in into one stock, and what make it worst it is a US stock that doesn't give dividend and need to maintain by paying adr fee. it will just getting worse in bear market and dca is the stupidest mistake I ever made. Now cut loss and change strategy. will only buy stocks that going to hold for life and giving dividends. will definitely get my loss back, even if it takes long or longer time.
I am relatively new to trading hoping it to supplement my income. My biggest weakness is not able to identify opportunities timely, going in at a right time and selling it at a right time to gain profit.
Biggest trading weakness is still trying to aim for the best price or the lowest price. Will try to be more objective and focus on just profit, be it big or small.
I have two weaknesses actually. 1. Not knowing when to take profit. I continue to hold until the stock dips. 2. Continue holding losing stocks in hopes of recovery until it is 50% or more down. Should sell earlier than that. Both comes down to mindset. In first case greed waiting for more profits. In case two it is not wanting to book losses.
My biggest trading weakness is dont know how to cut loss and keep chasing and buying the dip, hope for the stock to rebound or recover. After a significant loss, I believe I need to know when to cut loss or stop buying the dip. If not the loss will keep increase and in the end nothing left but debt. Is is good to set a line or selling price to cut loss. [Blush]
I think most traders will face this problem.. when the stock falls below your "cut loss" price.. do you sell and cut loss immediately or hope that this is just a fake engineered by the big guys who is trying to run the stops to force you to sell early only for the price to spike up later.. how long to wait.. and when to realise the drop is real and to really cut loss.... I guess retail investors like us will never be able to tell... That is my weakness.. To hold for too long... Even when it is obvious the train has left...
You know what discipline is when talking about trading stocks, yet you make deviate from it once you tell yourself âthis time is different, have a reason (excuse actually)â This is the weakness. Easier said than done most times.
I know some the theory, but if human emotion involves and controlling the human like me, that's it, repeating experience was happening again. I newly joined Tiger Broker, and it's the fist time had a great trading where I could read so many data of companies within the platform. Up to the point, I bought Tiger broker share without thinking the theory anymore, I realised that bought at the highest peak. But I hold the share, because I trust Tiger broker price will go to a new time high.
đMy biggest trading weakness is a classic: I am a world class "Bag Holder", treating losing stocks like stray puppies that just need more "time" and "hope" to get back to breakeven. 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
not enough capital isy weakness... if I have big capital, I can quick swing with big profit. With big capital, I can progressively buy a stock even the price keep dropping.