|    The Impulsive Trader
				  
                                      
                                     The Stereotype  We are all familiar with the stereotype
                                        of the impulsive trader. Traders who
                                        are impulsively looking for trading thrills,
                                        while telling themselves they are doing
                                        it to make a profit. 
 The rush of adrenalin that comes from making the "big" trade and then watching
  to see if it is followed by a "big" win.
 
 It is not so different from betting at the race track. It is far removed from
  what is required for successful market timing.
 
 Impulsive market timers take trades because of emotional responses to news
  events, market rallies, or market sell offs, because they "feel" they know
  what is going to happen next in the markets.
 
 They take trades not because the trade is required, but for the thrill of the
  trade itself. All risk controls are ignored, no logical trading strategy is
  followed, and no exit strategy is prepared ahead of time.
 
 Of course anyone can act impulsively at times. But in the investing world,
  impulsive trades are almost always losing trades. Impulsive trading has led
  to the outright ruin of many traders.
 Delaying Gratification 
 An interesting test was once run to measure a person's impulsive tendencies:
 
 Participants were asked to decide between taking an immediate, small monetary
  reward (that is, $100 right now) or a larger reward given later, $500 in six
  months.
 
                                        
                                          
                                            | "...in
                                                the investing world, impulsive
                                                trades are almost always losing
                                                trades. And compulsive impulsive
                                                trading, can lead to outright
                                                ruin." |  Impulsive people tended to take the
                                        smaller, immediate reward. They have
                                        difficulty delaying gratification. They
                                        can't wait for the larger reward. They
                                        want what they can get as soon as possible. 
 Even disciplined people can act impulsively when the conditions are right.
 There is little harm in impulsively
                                             going for a latte instead of your
                                             usual morning coffee, black with
                                             two equals. 
 Yet while some impulsive decisions may have little effect on one's life, impulsive
decisions made when trading the stock market can have major negative consequences.
 
 Compulsively Impulsive
 
 Market timing, and all successful trading for that matter, requires that investors
clamp down on emotional impulsive behavior. Market timing is possibly "the" perfect
example of unemotional, non-impulsive and non-compulsive planning. Timers look
far ahead in time, planning for gains that may not be realized for months. If
in cash during a bear market, actual profits may be postponed years.
 
 Instant gratification is the exact opposite of what market timers must expect.
Those who think that long term buy-and-hold investors hold the edge in long term
planning are not correct. It is market timers, following a plan that takes years
to unfold but offering gains far in excess of a simple buy-and-hold, who have
the real long term strategy.
 
 Conclusion
 
 Impulsive traders will have great difficulty being successful (profitable) market
timers. Market timing is the non-impulsive execution of a planned strategy, that
can only be successful over time.
 
 Market timing requires adherence to a trading strategy that requires trading
not when you feel the urge, but only at specific points in time when your trading
strategy tells you to do so. And, those times are often in direct conflict with
the prevailing market sentiment.
 
 Impulsive personalities face many difficulties. But in investing, be sure to
hold those impulses at bay if you want to successfully beat the markets.
 
 Recent articles from the FibTimer market timing services;
 
 © Copyright 1996-2014, Market Timing Strategies, Inc., 
                              All Rights Reserved.
 
 FibTimer reports  may not  be redistributed without 
                            permission.
 
 Disclaimer: The financial markets are risky. Investing is 
                        risky. Past performance does not guarantee future performance. 
                        The foregoing has been prepared solely for informational 
                        purposes and is not a solicitation, or an offer to buy or 
                        sell any security. Opinions are based on historical research 
                        and data believed reliable, but there is no guarantee that 
                  future results will be profitable.
 |