Sunday, December 25, 2022
Evidence-Based Spirituality: Finding Personal Peace
Sunday, December 18, 2022
Your Mental Sharpe Ratio
Consider what I call the Mental Sharpe Ratio. How much mental capital do we expend per unit of profit made? If we make money, but find ourselves emotionally drained, frustrated, or anxious along the way, that would be a positive Sharpe Ratio but a negative Mental Sharpe. If we lose money while learning a new strategy, but find the process intellectually stimulating, competitively challenging, and positively engaging in terms of teamwork, then we have a negative Sharpe Ratio, but a high and positive Mental Sharpe.
Too much of trading psychology is focused on reducing drains on mental capital. That's helpful but will only make a negative Mental Sharpe less negative. If we are approaching markets in ways that make use of our greatest strengths, interests, and values, then our trading should be *giving* us energy. It's like a romantic relationship. A good life partner inspires us and brings out the best in us. A job is often draining, not a calling.
If you're finding yourself working on your trading psychology day after day, it's like being in a marriage that you constantly have to work on. Something isn't right. The fit might not be there; what you're doing is most likely not your calling. Review your most positive periods of Mental Sharpe: that is very likely what you're meant to be doing in your trading. Review your highest periods of Mental Sharpe outside of trading: that is what you're meant to be doing with your life.
Further Reading:
Radical Renewal - A blog book on the spirituality of trading
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Tuesday, December 06, 2022
The Three Essential Sources of Your Trading Edge
Thursday, November 24, 2022
Trading Consciously
A therapy for the mentally well begins with the realization that change is impossible while we remain in our habitual states of consciousness. Talking about our problems or working on changing behavior while remaining in our characteristic states is like trying to improve the reception on a TV by switching channels. "What can one do in sleep?" Ouspensky asks his students. "One can only have different dreams--bad dreams, good dreams, but in the same bed. The dreams may be different, but the bed is the same".
Such is the state of most coaching, counseling, and therapy. It changes the content of our thoughts, but we remain in the same "bed". True change requires that we awaken and rise from our bed. Because when we can access different states of consciousness, we become able to process self-relevant information in qualitatively different, creative, and constructive ways.
Several days ago I found myself running late for a morning meeting. In a frenzy, I attempted to beat the clock by getting myself dressed, quickly checking the overnight trading in the financial markets, and getting my children ready for school. I went to the closet to get my jacket, but it was nowhere to be found. Twice I scanned the rack and could not find the jacket. Meanwhile, the clock was ticking and I was growing frustrated with my mounting lateness. Suddenly, without premeditation, I closed my eyes and evoked a piece of music that I have come to equate with a clear and calm state of mind. I calmly walked back to the closet and began looking for the jacket between the hanging garments. Sure enough, it had fallen off its hanger and was caught between two other articles of clothing.
What is important in all this is that, in my ordinary state of consciousness, I was incapable of seeing between the garments. The jacket was lost as long as I remained in my normal mode. Only once I had shifted to another state was I able to see. How much else lies "between the garments", unseen, while we fuss and fume through the racks of life?
Ouspensky was correct: As long as we believe we're conscious, we do not take the steps to live--and trade--consciously.
Further Reading:
Trading With a Higher Consciousness
How We Tranceform the Mindscape
A Radical Method for Quieting the Mind
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Friday, November 18, 2022
Relapse Prevention: A Neglected Topic In Trading Psychology
A savvy trader at SMB Capital reached out with a dilemma. Each month he creates a new goal to work on, but to his dismay he has found that, once he moves on to a new goal, a previous problem resurfaces! Psychologists refer to this as the problem of relapse. Old patterns of thought, action, and feeling become ingrained habits. They are not only learned, but overlearned. It is relatively easy to change a habit pattern when we put full attention to doing things differently. It is also easy to fall back into that pattern when our attention is turned elsewhere.
This is a neglected topic in trading psychology. We talk about making changes, but not so much about maintaining those changes.
It is discouraging to make a change and feel that you're making progress, only to fall back into old ways and re-experience negative consequences. But relapse is an intrinsic part of the change process. We will always relapse until we have turned our new, constructive patterns into positive habit patterns. That means that we have to rehearse and rehearse and repeat and repeat our positive changes day after day until they become automatic, natural parts of us. If we need to muster motivation and effort every time we want to do things constructively, we'll never be able to direct our willpower toward new goals.
This is where psychological resilience is important. When we relapse, we want to summon our determination to change and say that "This is not how my story will end!" If I relapse after three weeks of positive change, that's progress compared with relapsing every week. Relapse is a detour, not a failure. If we're truly learning and growing, we make special efforts to learn from our relapses. That enables us to respond differently and constructively to the situations that may have triggered our old ways.
What I emphasized to the smart trader who raised the question is that you never want to let go of Goal #1 when you formulate Goal #2. Change is never a straight line. We always need to be working on our old patterns, even as we tackle new ones. As I emphasize in The Daily Trading Coach, we defeat relapse through repetition.
Further Reading:
The Power of Regret in the Change Process
The Secret to Changing Our Selves
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Sunday, November 13, 2022
Strong Two Day Rally: What Comes Next?
Sunday, November 06, 2022
Trading Psychology Advice - 3: Solution-Focused Trading
The first post in this series emphasized the importance of getting the right kind of help--mentoring vs. coaching--for your trading challenges. The second post stressed the value of structuring your learning processes the right way, by first pursuing competence and then by cultivating expertise. In this third and final post, I highlight a valuable approach to making changes--in life and in trading.
The solution-focused approach that I write about in Trading Psychology 2.0 and throughout this blog reflects a unique psychological perspective. Instead of solely focusing on our problems, we should examine occasions in which our problem patterns don't occur. Very often, it is in the exceptions to our problems that we can identify what we are doing right. So, for example, let's say that I have a problem with trading emotionally and impulsively during periods of frustration. Well, I don't go on tilt every time something doesn't go my way, so what am I doing to not become overemotional at those times? Upon reflection, perhaps I'm talking to myself differently on those occasions. Perhaps my positions are sized or structured differently. Whatever I'm doing when my problems don't occur could offer the kernels of solutions. What's great is that these are solutions genuine to me: ones that are already working.Furthermore, the exceptions to our problem patterns are usually there because they reflect some underlying strengths that we can leverage personally and professionally. For example, I may find that I trade much more selectively and avoid marginal trades when I talk out my ideas with a trading partner or teammate and when they do the same with me. My strengths in processing information interpersonally (talking aloud rather than writing or keeping ideas in my head) and my social strengths (enjoying working with others and helping them) enable me to be my best self during my trading.
What I've shared in my writings is that, in some measure, you are already the trader you seek to become. The exceptions to your problems hold the key to your solutions. By doing more and more of what works, we can become more and more of who we hope to be.
Further Reading:
Keys to Solution-Focused Trading
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Monday, October 31, 2022
Trading Psychology Advice - 2: Pursue Your Development The Right Way
Sunday, October 23, 2022
Trading Psychology Advice - 1: Get the Right Kind of Help
Friday, October 14, 2022
What Trading Cannot Do For Us
Friday, October 07, 2022
How Can We Stay Chill In A Volatile Market Environment?
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Friday, September 30, 2022
Creativity in Finding Market Opportunity
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Very Oversold Stock Market: Is It Time To Buy?
Sunday, September 18, 2022
Four Reasons You May Not Be Succeeding In Your Trading
It is not at all uncommon for traders to feel as though they are falling short of their expectations. Trading is all about risk and reward, and all of us have finite hit and Sharpe ratios. That all but guarantees that there will be periods of drawdown and suboptimal performance. When we chronically underperform our expectations, that itself can lead to a frustrated mindset that ensures future trading challenges. Here are four reasons you might be underperforming your expectations over significant periods of time and what you can do about them:
1) Your expectations are unrealistic - It is not at all uncommon that developing traders attempt to take shortcuts in their learning process and take too much risk, too soon. Often, this is because they *need* to make money and can't allow themselves to travel the learning curve of developing experience and expertise. Think of any performance field, from athletics to music to acting. No one achieves consistent expertise and success in a matter of months. In the field of medicine, a student goes through four years of study to become a doctor--and then goes through multiple years of graduate study to master a specialty. Our expectations should be about learning and development; we need to grade ourselves on our progress, not on whether we can hit our end point quickly.
2) The markets have changed - I recently spoke with a trader who had been making money earlier this year and then stopped making money. The frustration of the recent performance led to further trading problems. When we examined his trading, it was clear that he had a bullish bias and made his money by fading extreme price moves. In the higher volatility environment, price moves went from extreme to more extreme and, of course, the bullish bias stopped working once we transitioned to a macro environment of quantitative tightening, rising interest rates, and high inflation. Our trader was underperforming because he, in relative terms, was a one-trick pony. He needed to return to researching opportunities and add to his trading arsenal. Failure is often a failure to adapt.
3) You are not playing to your strengths - I often find that traders attempt to make money in ways that do not tap into what they are truly good at. Active traders who recognize shifts in patterns in markets will develop longer-term "conviction" and lose their flexibility. Big picture traders who excel at researching opportunities in markets will get caught up in the wiggles of short-term price movement and get "chopped up". This is why it is so important to study your trading successes: trades and periods of trading when you have been at your best. We learn a lot by identifying our most fulfilling period of trading: these are usually the ones that reflect our distinctive strengths. The goal is to become the best version of yourself, not to become someone else.
4) Trading is not your path - This is the one possibility that you almost never hear from trading gurus and would-be mentors and coaches. They seek your business, so it's toxic to suggest that maybe trading is not your best path to success and fulfillment. The ability to make a significant living from a performance field--athletics, music, writing--is the rare exception, not the base case. I have shared many times my attempt to become a full-time trader. I made money--and I was miserable. My deepest rewards come from connecting with and helping people: that is why I became a psychologist. Sitting in front of screens for hours at a time did not tap into the best of me, and that was a guarantee that I would never achieve my greatest success as a trader.
Failure is information. When we fall short, there is usually an important lesson to be learned. Understanding why we're falling short of expectations is the first step in setting ourselves on our best path.
Further Reading:
Overcoming Our Fear of Failure
Three Warning Signs of Trading Failure
Keeping Your Spirits Up When You Are Drawing Down
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Sunday, September 11, 2022
Trading Lesson From a Social Psychology Experiment
I recently came across a classic social psychology experiment. The subjects were seminary students and they were told to prepare a talk on the Good Samaritan. Both groups were told that they would be delivering their talk to a group of mentors. The first group was told that they running late to the talk and to get to the classroom as soon as possible. The second group was told that they were on time and did not need to rush to deliver their talk.
Unknown to the subjects, along the way to the classroom was an actor lying on the ground, moaning, and in obvious discomfort. The group of seminary students not in a rush to their talk was significantly more likely to stop to help the actor than the group in a rush. Indeed, among the rushed group, there were students who literally stepped over the person in distress in order to get to the classroom!
There is an important parallel to the trading world. If a seminary student who has just been focusing on a parable about helping will not help a person in obvious distress because of their own immediate needs, how much more so will we fail to do what we are meant to do because of our own internal pressures! The person lying on the ground in distress is our profit and loss statement. No matter how much we rehearse our "process" and what we are meant to do, our best intentions can become hijacked by the needs of the moment.
The point is that it is not enough to merely look at what is out there: we need to see. If we truly see a person in need, we will stop and help, even if this makes us a bit late. If we truly see the risk and reward in front of us, we can stop and do the right thing. Overtrading is a failure of vision. We are looking at the market, but not seeing opportunity and threat.
Bringing unmet personal needs to trading is a great way to become like the seminary students who--on the way to a talk about helping!--rush by a person and fail to help. It's another way of saying that great trading comes from the strengths of the soul and not the needs of the ego.
Further Reading:
The Main Ideas From Radical Renewal
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Sunday, September 04, 2022
We Become What We Do
Sunday, August 28, 2022
Four Pieces of Trading Wisdom to Turn Your Trading Psychology Around
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Improving Your Trading Psychology By Improving Your Trading
Friday, August 05, 2022
The Key to Understanding and Overcoming Trading Tilt
I recently spoke on a YouTube video for SMB Capital regarding the dynamics of trading on tilt. The example I gave in order to place the topic in perspective was that of a surgeon. A surgeon performing a delicate procedure might feel frustration if things aren't going smoothly, but the surgeon never allows the frustration to take over. (Can you imagine a surgeon on tilt, slashing away with no discipline whatsoever?!) Why is it that the surgeon can maintain perspective and professionalism, but many traders cannot?
Tilt is a function of frustration; when we become frustrated, we're more likely to act impulsively. This is why some of the most effective techniques for managing our tilt states involve physical control of the body. If the body is calm, the mind finds it easier to maintain perspective and control. As this video suggests, our frustrations typically stem from the need to be right. In that sense, tilt is the natural consequence of our egos getting in the way of our best performance. (See Radical Renewal for a detailed treatment of that topic; most trading psychology challenges are actually spiritual challenges in which we act from ego, not from soul).
The key to understanding tilt is that the needs we bring to our performance ultimately dictate how we will respond to success, failure, and challenge.
What needs does a surgeon bring to treating a patient? The number one need is captured in the physician's oath to "Above all else, do no harm". The safety of the patient is always primary. That is a soul-need. It says, "I am a servant entrusted with this person's body". It's not about me, it's not about how quickly I can do the surgery or how much I'll make from the procedure. It's about the sacred responsibility of caring for another person.
The successful trader brings to markets the need to trade well. "Above all else, do no harm" means that our capital is valuable and that we need to manage risk and be able to accept expectable setbacks. The trade is not about me; it's about identifying opportunity and acting decisively and responsibly to capture that opportunity. If I bring ego needs to trading, every loss and every missed trade can become an ego threat. If I bring my soul's need for growth and development to trading, I can take pride in my work and stay calm and focused, even when things aren't going according to expectation.
We can trade well and learn during a drawdown. No one trades well with a wounded ego.
Further Reading:
Techniques for Overcoming Frustration
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Sunday, July 24, 2022
Creativity in Analyzing Market Information
An important topic in the Trading Psychology 2.0 book is how to develop our creativity by asking questions that others don't ask and studying information that others don't gather. Here's a nice example of creative processing from my trading many years ago. My point in that article was that "creativity is the new discipline". It's not enough to find an edge and stick to it in a disciplined manner. Now the discipline has to extend to finding fresh edges.
Here's an example of a creative edge emerging from unique data sets. For a number of years, I have tracked, each day, the number of stocks across all indexes that make fresh one-month new highs and fresh one-month new lows. Normally, we look at the data reported by the NYSE regarding 52-week new highs and lows. I have found value in the shorter-term measures. Over the past three years, all of the market's gains (SPY) over a next 10-day basis can be attributed to low levels in the monthly new highs. In other words, it's the relative absence of new highs that predicts positive returns over the next 20 days. Similarly, a relative absence of new monthly lows is significantly associated with positive returns over the next ten trading days. What is meaningful, interestingly, is the absence of new highs and new lows. I would have never anticipated this had I not collected and investigated the data set.
(A good exercise is to develop an explanation for why this edge exists and how you might use the underlying logic to create edges at other time frames or in other markets. That's how the creative process works).
Here's another unique finding over that same period. Essentially all the market's (SPY) upside on a next 3-5 day basis has occurred when few stocks close above their upper Bollinger Bands. Similarly, we see superior returns over a next five-day basis when few stocks close below their lower Bollinger Bands.
In short, there is information in the absence of strength and weakness.
When you look at new and different data, you open the door to seeing new and different patterns in markets. And that means your drilling is more likely to strike oil.
Further Reading:
How Rare It Actually Is For Daytraders to Consistently Make Money
What is the Purpose of Your Trading--And Why That's Important
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