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60 seconds in and Ohio State is plowing down the field. As I write this sentence, they dropped the ball in the end zone. … Try it again – 3 and 10 and in!! Now the question relevant to trading and risk psychology is … 15 minutes ago did they KNOW that was how it was going to go? Did they know exactly what the Oregon Ducks were going to do? Well of course not you say….
Okay then… can someone explain to me how the game, and particularly the QB’s job, is any different than being a trader or a portfolio manager? I mean sure they have a plan and they have studiously developed and trained-for expectations but don’t they still have to think “on their feet”? Don’t they have to assess the situation and make nanosecond judgments?
Why does everyone buy the widespread idea that traders have to come up with “plays” and then in turn execute them in a robotic fashion in the game of the markets? What happens to the need for judgment when faced with changing volatility? What happens to the need to use your brain in the toughest game on the planet?
Yep it is easier to NOT to have to use judgment… but is it realistic? I mean should stops and targets always be the same? Does that idea make ANY logical sense in as fluid environment as the markets present?
And in fact – worse, what is the downside to believing in the myth of the robot following the plan? There is one you know… and I submit to you that it accounts for some large % of the fact the vast majority of traders can’t consistently and reliably take money out of the markets.
And if it isn’t quite a robot – the isn’t it judgment? And if you have to use judgment at all … then what do you have to do to improve it? What do you have to do to capitalize on the fact that it is an asset?
This is a thought experiment… it is meant to help those who try it learn something… or at least stretch our minds to the point that we see the situation more as it really is.
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