Even Greats Like Druckenmiller Make Mistakes. So Learn From Them.by James "Rev Shark" DePorre
Stanley Druckenmiller sold all his technology stocks in January 2000. After this sale, he watched a couple of "gunslingers" continue to rake up huge gains. He couldn’t help himself and had to play. He bought $6 billion of technology stocks in March 2000 and within six weeks, he had lost $3 billion on that single bet.
The big challenge in trading and investing isn’t developing effective strategies, tactics, and methodologies that should produce profits but actually sticking to the rules and taking the necessary actions at the right time.
There are certain things I’ve been working on since the day I started trading 30 years ago that I still have to work on every day. A good example is that every year, I make a resolution to trade bigger and be more aggressive when I feel like I have a good trade. Far too often, I don’t push hard enough when I have an edge, and I end up with small gains in exceptional situations.
My emotion is to not take on too much risk ... but I'm not taking into account how I can control that risk with stops, partial sales, time frame diversification, and other tactics.
You will always have doubts about a trade, and your emotions will push you to do the wrong thing. Develop a game plan in advance and then be cognizant of how you feel as your trade goes through its inevitable ups and downs.
Source: The Street
https://pro.thestreet.com/market-commen ... m_content=
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"