Financial Voice

Tuesday 10th April 2018 11:05 EDT
 

Dear Financial Voice Reader,

The secret to wealth is to overcome your own mind. When I wrote my first book, there was a very good reason I called it ‘The Mind of a Trader’.

There are many biases that influence our reasoning. Popular literature recognizes 53 different types of cognitive biases; however, four of them are particularly important and significantly influence risk calculations and strategic decision making.

These cognitive biases are:

Prior hypotheses and focusing on limited target- this happens when a decision maker brings hypothesis and personal beliefs into decision-making process without previously inspecting the relevant data. Consequently, the decision-maker tends to overlook the information and evidence that can prove the opposite of what he thinks. This is a major problem for traders because instead of being detached and dispassionate when looking at data, they let their pre-existing trades and losses affect their future decisions.

Exposure to limited alternatives- in the situation when data is incomplete, decision makers tend to focus on limited numbers of alternatives because they usually fill in the missing data with intuition instead of trying to get additional information. Traders do trades they shouldn’t. Instead of waiting for high probability trades, instead they dive in impatiently. 

Insensitivity to outcome probabilities- if a manager is influenced more by the value of possible outcomes then by the magnitude of probabilities, he/she will tend to make very risky and hazardous decisions that are not based on statistical calculations of probabilities. Here the trader thinks how much money he will make, not how likely he is to make it. In trading, all we are trying to do is make small incremental gains, not huge windfalls.

In trading we need high probability trades.

Illusion of manageability- when decision-makers intuitively believe that success is more probable than what statistical models predicted they can become overly optimistic. Consequently, they tend to overlook risks and develop illusion of control in uncontrollable situations. In addition, in these situations, they irrationally think that they can and will solve every possible problem that arose as a result of their decisions.

When it comes to trading, it is vitally important to be aware of the biases which inflict everyone. Overcome this, not just in investing but in life, and you will have the roots of success. The reason so few people are successful in life, who reach the pinnacle, is because humans are not made to be successful. We are made for the grind, eat, feed, survive, not thrive, but survive. So it takes extra effort to be successful. The mind is the biggest hurdle, not others, but ourselves.

Alpesh B Patel

For a free online trading course visit www.alpeshpatel.com/apprentice


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