This articles was printed on July 2003 issue of Stock
Futures & Options- SFO Magazine.
Why Can't You Pull the Trigger?
by: Dr. Ned Gandevani.
A
common problem among novice and experienced traders alike is at
some point they fail to implement their trading plans. They may
spend countless hours developing a trading plan, but for some
reason, when the time comes for executing their plan, they lose
sight of the goal and let the trading opportunities presented
pass them by without reaping any of the benefits.
For example, you may see the market is approaching your price
level to buy, but you fail to pull the trigger at the critical
time. As the market is moving up, you feel compelled to act, yet
you do not. You feel angry and begin beating yourself up
psychologically. You keep asking yourself why you didn’t take
the necessary action? To get a better understanding of this
behavior, let’s look at factors that make up our behaviors.
Behavior of a dynamic system results from two factors: internal
dynamics and external factors. A dynamic system is any type of
system that exhibits a behavioral change over time. A dynamic
system, be it a stock market or a human being, moves and
interacts based on the outcome of two primary forces, internal
dynamics and external forces. For example, when you arrived at
your office this morning, you used a means of transportation (an
external factor) to meet your immediate objective (your want and
desire, internal dynamics) to get to the office.
To identify the main cause behind the “not-pulling-the-trigger”
syndrome, we will review these two factors in the following
sections.
Internal Dynamics
In addition to external factors, your own internal dynamics can
dramatically impact your behavior. According to David
McClelland, a psychologist with about 40 years of research in
human motivation under his belt, three variables interact in
complex ways and cause an individual to elicit certain
behaviors:
1. Cognition (i.e., your knowledge, your beliefs and
understanding);
2. Skills and adaptive traits (i.e., your habits, abilities and
personality traits);
3. Motives.
So, how does each of these factors affect a
“not-pulling-the-trigger” syndrome?
You did not have a trading system or have the proper knowledge
for trading. (Cognition);
You were not able to follow or implement your trading system due
to your personality traits and habits. (Traits);
You did not place your order due to lack of motivation and
desire (Motives).
In short, your understanding, psychological and emotional states
and your motivation collectively had a major impact, so you did
not place your orders. Let’s look at each of these three
variables in the following sections.
1. Trading systems and trading knowledge. Your cognitive
understanding of the market, i.e., your knowledge and beliefs
about your trading system, help you perceive outside information
and filter it accordingly. To trade successfully, it is
necessary to establish a trading plan that answers the following
questions: What market(s) do you want to trade? Do you want to
trade futures, stocks or currencies? In which timeframe are you
interested? – long term (position trading), short term (swing
trading), day trading? How do you want to trade? – do you want
to use a mechanical system or a discretionary system?
The cognitive variable deals with your understanding and belief.
Today, a majority of traders know that they should have some
sort of trading system before they risk their hard-earned money
in the market. Your trading system basically tells you when to
enter the market by placing your buy (long) or sell (short)
orders, and it also tells you when to exit and where to put your
protective stop. In future articles, we would discuss the
essential factors in choosing and developing a sound trading
system. For now, you should look into your own trading system to
see if its variables are compatible with who you are. However,
knowing how to trade and implement your system should enable you
to bite the bullet and pull the trigger.
2. Applying your trading system and knowing your ABC’s.
According to Dr. Ellis, the father of Rational - Emotive
therapy, our beliefs about events, rather than events
themselves, determine our emotions and behaviors. His theory is
based on the ABC model. When you see an activating event (A) in
a particular way, because of your beliefs (B) about the
consequences(C) of that behavior, you adapt your behavior to the
perceived outcome of the action. The activating event (A) and
what you believe (B) about it, creates the consequences (C) of
your behavior. Your beliefs create and shape your behavior
rather than the activating event, e.g. the market.
Let’s look at an example of this theory. Suppose you are driving
home from work, when a cyclist seemingly comes out of nowhere.
You hit your brakes and the car screeches to a halt. Your heart
is racing, adrenaline is coursing through your body, and you may
even break into a cold sweat. Though you were surprised, the
event was resolved quickly and no one was hurt, yet your
physiological reactions were identical to those had you had an
accident. This is due to the fact that your beliefs about the
event, whether real or not, had a powerful effect on your
experience both physically and emotionally.
Similarly, your beliefs establish a foundation for your reaction
to market behavior. Though the market is the same for everyone,
everyone’s reaction to the market is not. For example, you may
think that futures trading is high risk and akin to gambling.
Since this is the basis of your belief, your action is based on
this belief, and you exhibit gambling behavior. You might risk
too much or try to make a killing in the market. The result is
that you may not follow your trading system; you may pull the
trigger too much or not enough. On the other hand, your friend
views trading futures markets as simply another way to make
extra when they traded consistently through a system. Because of
your friend’s belief about the futures market, he is likely to
pull the trigger exactly when he planned.
Using the ABC model then can enable you to understand and, more
importantly, correct your behavior. So, it’s important for you
to analyze not only your beliefs about the market, but also the
basis of your beliefs about the market.
Like our beliefs, our traits affect our actions and behavior,
even in trading. Think about your experiences trading. Do you
become nervous as soon as you place a trade and end up not
following your trading plan, or do you sit back and gauge the
market’s movement against your plan? On a Trading Personality
Profile (TPP) test, for example, a nervous trader will likely
have a high score in neuroticism, a determining factor in your
trading. Dr. Pierce J. Howard describes neuroticism or negative
emotionality as one of the main dimensions of our personality
traits. The range of behavior ranges from reactive to resilient.
In that continuum, the middle ground is someone who is
responsive, someone who may have a mixture of both traits. Have
you noticed how some people are naturally cool under stress? You
may even call them cold or aloof. They probably have a low score
in neuroticism.
Perhaps, you’re not exactly nervous when you trade, but you
always feel you can improve on your trading plan, and you’re
constantly tweaking it. Say that on a particular day you notice
that a few signals were not profitable. Then you start playing
with your system with the idea that you could improve on it.
“Why not,” you think to yourself. You could add a few more
indicators that seem to have some validity and achieve a better
performance. You check out a few indicators like moving averages
or different periods for the stochastics. Subsequently, you get
a signal from your new and improved system, and it is a loser.
Now you realize that the old version of your system might have
produced a winning trade. You get angry with yourself because
you did not follow your system, and you kept modifying it.
A TPP test may reveal that you have a high score in the openness
dimension. It means that you like to explore different options
and keep tweaking your system while looking for the perfect
system. You find that you keep repeating that same behavior and
you wonder why. You repeat your behavior because it is part of
who you are, that is one of your traits. Rather than beating
yourself up over it, you may need to look for a system or an
alternative method that is compatible with your particular
personality traits rather than try to change the system or trade
in conflict with it.
In order to quickly identify your strengths and weaknesses in
trading, take a TPP test. If you are able to identify your
particular traits, you then can create or select a trading
system that is more compatible with your own personality, giving
you a higher probability of success. As you can see from the
previous example, we must have a better understanding of our own
personality traits in order to become better traders.
3. Trading motivation and desire. Why do you trade? Do you like
the action? Do you see trading as quick money? Your answers to
these and similar questions will reveal your inner motivation
for trading. Motivation is the underlying force that moves you
toward or away from something. Many traders may come to trading
– in particular day trading – because they enjoy the action.
Some may trade solely for its potential monetary rewards.
However, other people may trade because trading presents an
intellectual challenge for them and keeps them sharp. They like
the challenge of trying to figure out what the market will do
next.
What is your motivation for trading? If, like many individuals,
you started trading merely to make money, then ask yourself,
“can I make the same amount of money without going through all
the inherent financial risks and the emotional stress of
trading?” What if you were offered a job that you could make the
same amount of money, even more? Would you take the job?
Let’s consider two traders who have just taken long positions in
the S&P.
Trader A watches the market as it fluctuates around the entry
point. Then, without warning, the market breaks three points
straight down. The stop being used is a mental stop of two
points. Trader A gets angry and exits his position with a
three-point loss. Although upset, he realizes that this is just
part of the cost of doing business and begins to look for the
next setup.
Trader B also watches the market as it fluctuates around his
entry price. Again, without warning, the market breaks and is
now three points below the entry price. The stop is also a
two-point mental stop, yet the trader does not exit his
position. He gets very angry and begins cursing and banging on
his monitor. He is yelling at the floor traders, brokers,
whoever might be responsible for this move against his position.
Now the market retraces about two points toward his entry. He is
now feeling much better about things and is validated for not
exiting his position and following his plan. Then, just as
suddenly as the last break, the market drops another four
points. Now he is fuming. His position is now underwater five
points. And, yet, he still does not exit his position. His anger
is fueled by the fact that he could have exited with only a
one-point loss, but now has a five-point potential loss.
Considering the pain vs. pleasure principle, why has he not
exited his losing trade? Often traders feel pain from losing
trades, but don’t follow their plan or make the necessary change
in strategies. Did Trader B enjoy his feeling of loss and
regret? What was his motivation for not exiting? Did he not like
being wrong? Or was it something deeper? Was it denial? Or was
it about control. These questions require serious consideration
before one could answer them, and it is essential to identify
the motivating factor behind your behavior before you can change
it.
The blanket view of the psychology of trading focuses on fear
and greed. Fear as a primary motivation may show itself in
different variations. Fear and greed may be utilized as general
concepts to understand market psychology. To break it down, fear
is primary, but does not provide the answer for the causes
underlying all problems. The trader in a losing trade fears
losing more. It is human nature to manage risks, so he manages
his losses and stays with the losing trade longer than he
should. Another way in which a trader exhibits fear is when he
cuts his winning trades short. He takes the profit quickly out
of fear of losing whatever money he has gained. Further research
of the psychology of human behavior reveals that we are risk
averse in our gains; we try to protect profits by exiting trades
quickly. Nevertheless, understanding that motivation is a
critical component of internal dynamics should shed more light
on behavior, in particular, trading behavior.
Many times motivating factors are clear, and many times they are
not. Motivation and emotions interact with each other in a
complex format. Sometimes the motivation might be easily
distinguishable from emotions. Other times, the line between
them is blurred, making it difficult to find the underlying
cause for behavior. One way to identify your inner or
subconscious motives is to look at your value system. What do
you value the most? How do you define good and bad? How do you
define success and failure? The answers to these questions can
help you figure out your motives for being in the market and
help you define or redefine your value system for faster goal
attainment.
If money is your primary motivation, then you will experience
emotional swings associated with your performance. In some
cases, when the market moves against you, you may get frightened
and exit your trade prematurely. Then, after you exited your
trade, the market goes in your favor, as was indicated by your
trading system. Or when your position starts to show a bit of
profit, you are compelled to exit quickly. Then, much to your
dismay, you see the market continue going in your favor for a
much larger profit. This type of motivator creates behavior
that, in turn, results in an emotional roller coaster for you.
You start beating yourself up psychologically and your
self-confidence is shaken.
For the same reason, you may not pull the trigger since you had
a losing trade and are concerned that your next one may be a
losing one too. So, you tell yourself that this time you will
look for more confirmation before you enter your trade. This
time the market moves away from your potential entry point too
quickly. Now you feel that you acted too slowly and missed a
great deal of profit on the trade. So the next time you decide
to be more aggressive and not wait for confirmation to enter
your trade. As luck would have it, the market moves against you
and you end up with a losing trade. “@!#%$$,” you repeat to
yourself and curse the market and whoever is close by. You again
start the negative internal dialogue and feel there is no end in
sight.
Trading is a business and, like any other business, you need to
have the fundamentals before your start. A love and passion for
trading. A motivation for trading far beyond money. A sound
trading system or methodology, a sound, trading plan, and the
ability to implement that plan. If you only trade for the money,
you would do best to find another career and avoid risking both
your emotional and financial capital. Your motivation for
trading is an important component underlying your behavior or
lack of it. If you are not able to pull the trigger, I encourage
you to find the real reason you are trading.
External Factors
External factors and your environment, such as your trading
location, may also play a large role in why you can’t pull the
trigger. Are you in an office or at home? If you are at an
office, are you alone or in a group setting? Are there any
windows? Is the room light and airy or dark and subdued? What
color are the walls? All of these may or may not have an impact
on your trading. In addition, there are other external factors.
Your Internet connection, your PC, your account size, your
broker, etc., all can have an impact on your trading. Though
external factors may influence your behavior, they affect you
only to the degree that your personality shows sensitivity to
them.
External factors are more like catalysts; they affect your
behavior and your ability to implement your trading strategies.
However, the decisive factors are internal dynamics: your
motivation, knowledge and personality traits. Among your
personality traits, you have one dimension that is called the
extraversion dimension. This dimension of your personality deals
with your preference for being actively involved or engaged with
other people and environments.
Depending on your score for the extraversion dimension, you
could be categorized as either being an extravert or an
introvert. If you like to take charge, assert your opinions and
work with people, you are most likely an extravert. If you tend
to be more independent, steady, reserved and comfortable being
alone or working alone, you are most likely an introvert.
An environment more suited to your personality would facilitate
better trading results. Therefore, you need to pay close
attention to your trading environment and arrange or modify it
so that it best suits your personality.
Understanding the internal dynamics and external environment
will help you implement your trades and help you avoid the
“not-pulling-the-trigger” syndrome. You need to acknowledge and
identify your habitual behavior patterns or personality traits
in order to be a successful trader. Paying attention to your
personality will aid you in making the right decisions and
increase your willingness to pull the trigger. A proper trading
environment and support group along with your clear
understanding of your trading system, habitual pattern and
personality traits and your true motivation, all hand in hand
eliminate the “not-pulling-the-trigger” syndrome and help you
achieve your trading success.
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