Quote from ChaosNSX:
Hey brothers, I don't know why I am having trouble with this hurdle. Maybe its fear maybe its greed. I will be up nicely for the day only to push it and give it all back and then some. I'm taught to strike while the irons hot, but when the iron get hots I only end up burning myself in the end. This slump I am now in is really destroying my equity curve. What has been other peoples experiences in tackling this, and walking home with something in your pocket consistently. I'm on day 12 of a straight losing streak, and its slowly breaking my will. I need advice. I hate to think my last month was pure luck. How does one handle this or change this course? I feel each day as if anouther bullet (no pun intended) is causing another wound and I'm slowly bleeding to death. Thanks in advance.

Quote from dchang0:
I've been dealing with the same kinda problem. For the past two months, I've been slowly giving back everything I'd earned in the past year. I was down to a 26% up for the year from my peak of 60% up--a devastating blow to my ego and account made in tiny paper cuts. Every consecutive losing trade sent me spinning between blaming myself for not having the discipline to trade my methodology and wondering if my pseudo-system had simply run its course. My patience is great enough that I took every hit in stride for two months with wholehearted faith in my ability to fix what's wrong, but I finally broke down two days ago when I realized I was totally lost. That day was the most depressing day of my recent trading life, and then after hitting rock bottom (should I pull my remaining profits out of my account and move them into other passive investments?) I realized that I had to drop everything--get back in touch with the market itself. My pseudo-system hadn't been checked against recent data, and I found that I'd been fighting the market the whole time, insisting on making an obsolete methodology work as well as it used to. A little bit of living the glory days, as it were. So I am trading now on a completely discretionary basis, getting a feel for the current market behavior, and building a new methodology for today's times. In one trade, I made back 20% of my account--proving I'm not totally lost--followed immediately by another profitable trade this morning. We'll see what tomorrow holds, but I have my confidence back, sad as it may be to have to let my old methodology go (until its preferred type of market conditions come around again). I'd recommend that you not quit the market entirely to go on vacation but instead take a step back, maybe develop a new system or reoptimize your old one, and paper trade to get your bearings in the new market conditions. When Tiger Woods is unhappy with his swing, he tears it apart and builds a new one, knowing full well that he'll lose a streak of tournaments while rebuilding it--but he comes back ten times as strong. I wasn't far-sighted enough to see the coming failures of my methodology before they hit me head on. Rest assured, you can turn things around--you just gotta let go of your emotional investment in the rules, methodologies and systems that had previously fueled your own glory days and be constantly developing new systems to match the current market.
Quote from kungfoofighting:
Rather than fear or greed, you may be having trouble letting go of the loss and trying to make up for it the next day. As the string of losing days has continued, it may be more and more difficult to get it out of your mind and therefore when you push it, you are losing discipline or not determining risk/reward correctly.
I used to struggle with the after effects of one losing day because I traded with too much emphasis on a $ amount that I wanted to net each day. If I had a down day, mentally I would think that I needed to make up the lost p/l, plus the daily goal I failed to meet, plus the current days goal, in order to be back on pace. This would invariably lead to poor trading because I would over-trade, and throw on more size than normal. The bigger positions would lead to larger than average losses if the trade didn't work out, and the commissions would add up. Usually one losing day would lead to a string of three or four.
I have since learned to take losing days in stride and do not let them influence my next day's trading. I do adapt my trading if I am in the hole early in the day. I find that many people trade worse when they are in the red because their criteria for which trades to take is lowered. They fear missing the one trade that could get them positive on the day and therefore trade everything that looks remotely viable. I call this the "I'll fuck anything that moves", mentality. Rather, when I am down on the day, I adopt an ultra-conservative strategy, where I will trade only the absolute best setups(low risk/high reward). You can't afford to have scratch trades, or even worse, losing trades when you are in the hole, they just increase the hurdle you need to get over to get positive. By being more selective than normal, I can ensure that my p/l is moving in the right direction with every trade I put on. If nothing presents itself, so be it; the loss hasn't widened.
If you aren't having trouble getting up on the day, lock a couple of those days in to put a literal end to the losing streak, and to get your confidence back. I find that I make 60-75% of my day in the first hour and a half of the day, then I put in on cruise control and coast the rest of the day picking off trades here and there to round things out. If I don't make my piece at the open, I don't try to force anything just to make my #'s, because the opportunities are rarely there. I should mention that I am a scalper, so the times where volume is heaviest are my best bet. Most importantly, forget the down days/lost money. They are gone. Keeping track of how many days in a row you've lost will affect your ability to trade well. Instead maybe you should keep track of how long you can go without a down day. That way, a down day only signals the start of a new win streak, rather than some sort of failure. [/QUOTE
Very good post....This is a great way to not get crazy when you are having a bad day....
Again...great post
M
Quote from burnin:
fasterpussycat,
maybe some day you will
get a life loooooossssssseeeeeeerrrrrrrrrr boy
Quote from dchang0:
I've been dealing with the same kinda problem. For the past two months, I've been slowly giving back everything I'd earned in the past year. ...