The Biggest Threat to Your Own Investment Success Could be Yourself
The following factual story is from a US University experiment to understand the psychology of success. There has subsequently been many repeats of this experiment by different people in different locations.
The experiment asked people (experiment subjects) to guess the outcome of tossing a coin and measured how many times they guessed correctly and incorrectly.
The experiment involved tossing the coin 500 times and the law of probability says that you would guess right around 250 times or 50% of the time. This outcome is the same no matter how high or how low your IQ is, no matter where you went to school or how much you have studied the art of coin tossing. Just about everyone understands this and knows it.
What you may not be aware of is that in the 500 tosses there is a fairly good chance that you will put together three or four runs of guessing five tosses in a row correctly. And here is where the psychology of success takes hold. What the university experiment did was asked the people guessing the outcome of the toss how they felt about their performance at various times.
What they found was that when people were having successful runs - four or five or six correct guesses in a row - that they believed that they themselves were responsible for this success. Reasons ranged from, I am getting better at this, to I am now concentrating harder and that is improving my performance.
Remebering that the experiment subjects were fully aware of the law of probability at work in the experiment, with a likelihood of 50% of the outcomes being correct and 50% of the outcomes being incorrect, but believed that their talent and/or ability was attributing to their success. Quite disturbing in its contradiction.
The same contradiction happens with traders and investors all the time when trading or investing in the stock market. This is especially observable with new traders and investers. The trader/invester may grow to believe they have "special talents" after a string of winning trades. This may make the trader/invester believe that they are somehow better, or have a special talent for trading, whereby their success has really only been because of probable "chance".
Before long, the investor or trader's belief in their own superior ability begins to result in over confidence - trading too many stocks or trading without properly managing the risk. And the next thing that happens is the Market Slap! The stock market has a nasty habit of slapping down over confident traders with a big loss.
So remember, every trade you take has risk which you need to manage. If you manage your risks and enjoy the chance string of winning trades from time-to-time you will be successful and you will avoid the Market Slap! - 23199
The experiment asked people (experiment subjects) to guess the outcome of tossing a coin and measured how many times they guessed correctly and incorrectly.
The experiment involved tossing the coin 500 times and the law of probability says that you would guess right around 250 times or 50% of the time. This outcome is the same no matter how high or how low your IQ is, no matter where you went to school or how much you have studied the art of coin tossing. Just about everyone understands this and knows it.
What you may not be aware of is that in the 500 tosses there is a fairly good chance that you will put together three or four runs of guessing five tosses in a row correctly. And here is where the psychology of success takes hold. What the university experiment did was asked the people guessing the outcome of the toss how they felt about their performance at various times.
What they found was that when people were having successful runs - four or five or six correct guesses in a row - that they believed that they themselves were responsible for this success. Reasons ranged from, I am getting better at this, to I am now concentrating harder and that is improving my performance.
Remebering that the experiment subjects were fully aware of the law of probability at work in the experiment, with a likelihood of 50% of the outcomes being correct and 50% of the outcomes being incorrect, but believed that their talent and/or ability was attributing to their success. Quite disturbing in its contradiction.
The same contradiction happens with traders and investors all the time when trading or investing in the stock market. This is especially observable with new traders and investers. The trader/invester may grow to believe they have "special talents" after a string of winning trades. This may make the trader/invester believe that they are somehow better, or have a special talent for trading, whereby their success has really only been because of probable "chance".
Before long, the investor or trader's belief in their own superior ability begins to result in over confidence - trading too many stocks or trading without properly managing the risk. And the next thing that happens is the Market Slap! The stock market has a nasty habit of slapping down over confident traders with a big loss.
So remember, every trade you take has risk which you need to manage. If you manage your risks and enjoy the chance string of winning trades from time-to-time you will be successful and you will avoid the Market Slap! - 23199
About the Author:
Want to find out more about share trading education then visit Just Shares' site on how to trade shares successfully with Just Shares Share Trading Course.


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