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Managing Fear and Greed When Trading CFDs

Apart from being a game of numbers, trading is also a battleground of emotions. Wins, losses, and market volatility can evoke a variety of emotions, which if not controlled could overtake your decision-making process. Among the emotions, fear and greed are not just the most common but also the most powerful emotions during CFD trading. In addition, psychological biases, such as loss aversion or overconfidence, can also play a role in influencing decisions driven by fear or greed. Learn how to manage these emotions to refine your strategies while trading Contracts for Difference.

How Does Fear and Greed Affect CFD Trading?

CFD trading involves the use of leverage, which magnifies market exposure with very little capital outlay by the trader. At the same time, you are aware that the leverage amount borrowed from your CFD broker will have to be returned, regardless of whether you earn a profit or lose the trade. This can trigger fear or anxiety in traders. On the other hand, the market moving favourably means your profits grow exponentially due to leverage, which could lead to greed.

Factors that Could Evoke Fear

  • Market Volatility: High volatility leads to quick and, sometimes, major price fluctuations. This could induce fear of loss in some traders.
  • Loss Aversion: Some traders might close a winning position too early due to the fear that the market could reverse at any time.
  • Leverage: Since trading on margin increases market exposure, some traders might fear the risk exposure, since both profits and losses will be magnified.
  • Lack of Regulation: When compared to the traditional financial markets, CFD trading might be less regulated in some jurisdictions. On the other hand, trading with an unregulated broker could expose you to potential fraud or manipulation.
  • Counterparty Risk: The CFD broker might default on their obligations or be unable to execute your order due to low liquidity.

Temptations That Cause Greed

Greed can lead traders to take on excessive risks, leading to significant, and often unnecessary, losses.

  • Leverage: Driven by the desire for quick and substantial returns, some traders might choose leverage limits beyond their risk appetite.
  • Overtrading: This is when traders hold on to losing positions in hopes that the market will reverse in their favour. The problem is that there is equal potential for the trend to continue, increasing losses.
  • Misinterpretation of Past Performance: When traders focus highly on past successful trades, they might disregard the current risks involved. Driven by the belief that past performance will repeat itself, traders might be willing to take on greater risks.
  • Overconfidence: Even short-term success, which might be based on luck rather than the Contract for Difference strategy, can cause traders to overestimate their skills and underestimate risks, leading to them opening larger positions than their risk tolerance level.
  • FOMO (Fear of Missing Out): Some traders might experience this when they witness others reaping profits with CFD trading. Driven by FOMO, they enter the market without adequate research, leading to impulsive decision-making and extreme risk-taking.

How to Manage Fear and Greed During CFD Trading?

While these emotions tend to be strong, they can be overcome with a little practice. Here’s how.

Understand Your Emotions

Traders need to be aware of their emotions. Fear and greed can turn into hesitation, impulsive decisions, or excessive risk-taking. If you notice these signs, pause and reassess your decisions objectively. Do your research and analysis and base decisions on the analysis.

Manage Expectations

Understand that losses are a part of trading and not every trade will turn out to be profitable. Even George Soros has faced his fair share of losses. Keeping this in mind can reduce the emotional impact of failures.

Build Your Trading Plan

A comprehensive trading strategy should take into account your preferred asset classes, trading psyche, trading style, risk appetite and trading goals. It should include:

  • Criteria to enter and exit positions.
  • How to determine the right position size.
  • Leverage ratio that works best for your risk appetite.
  • Risk management measures, such as stop loss and take profit.

Remember the 2% rule. Experienced traders never invest more than 2% of their total trading balance in a single position. By staying true to this plan, regardless of emotions, can minimise the risk of impulsive decisions.

Do Your Research

Invest time in researching your market of choice. Learn more about the factors that move prices. Stay updated with the news, read trade journals and analysis charts. And choose a CFD broker that offers powerful tools for analysis, so that you can make well-informed decisions.

Trade Responsibly

Emotional stress caused by high market volatility can be minimised by reducing the position size. With experience, you will gain insight into position sizes that are comfortable for you and those that lead to emotions.

Keep a Trading Journal

Track your trades on an online or physical journal. Go back to see what has worked and what hasn’t. This journal can also help you identify situations where emotions tend to run high and what helps control those emotions. This is a great way to refine your trading strategy too.

Most importantly, keep returning to your demo account to continue to fine-tune your strategy and strengthen your trading skills.

To Sum Up

  • CFD traders tend to make impulsive decisions due to fear and greed.
  • Factors like loss aversion, counterparty risk and market volatility can lead to fear.
  • FOMO and increased exposure due to leverage are some of the factors that lead to greed.
  • Emotions can be managed by creating a trading plan, conducting robust research, keeping a trading journal and trading responsibly.

 

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