Innerworth - Mind over markets newsletters

June 13th 2006

Every calamity is a spur and valuable hint.

  • Ralph Waldo Emerson -

Are You Preparing For a Crash?

The market seems to be going down. Is it time to think about gloom and doom? Perhaps. At least some market analysts seem to think that the masses have lost confidence in the economy, and these perceptions contribute to the bleak outlook many traders hold of the future. High interest rates have made many think of running. Many are ready to duck and cover. If the economy is ready for a downturn, it may be time to start thinking like a contrarian.

Is it time to stand aside until things improve? If you prefer to follow the masses, it may be time to stand aside. But if you are a rugged individualist who does not mind going your own way rather than following the masses, it may be time for you to step up to the plate and hit a few homeruns.

There’s no right or wrong way to trade. Some traders prefer safety. They prefer to trade only during a solid bull market where everyone is enthusiastic and the indexes go nowhere but up. But the markets don’t always go up, and there are times when you have to think creatively and go your own way. To trade like a winner, you must think outside the box, guessing what the crowd will do next, and anticipating how the movement of the masses can benefit you. The astute trader knows when to follow the crowd and when to go against it. The crowd is usually right, until the market trend turns. Some analysts are saying that we are in a turning point right now. It may be that an overvalued market is correcting or it may be that the economy is going to head south. Whatever it is, many are planning for a crash, maybe not a big crash but a little one at least.

The challenge is deciding if we are in a turning point, and if we are, developing a trading plan to capitalize on it. How do you do that? A contrarian thinks creatively. For example, during the Great Depression, radio became a big hit. People didn’t have money to go out on the town, so they stayed home and enjoyed “free” entertainment on the radio. If you are a creative trader, you must anticipate which stocks will go up as a result of an economic downturn. Obviously, in 2006 radio isn’t going to be the hot, new industry that suddenly makes the big profits that bolster stock prices. But there will be some new industry that is going to be the next big thing. If you think outside the box, you can identify sectors that will move upward in the future.

This all sounds great in theory, but in practice, it is difficult to anticipate which stocks will move upward in the future. How can one predict the future without a crystal ball? It is almost impossible. All you can do is to make an educated guess, but at the same time, be ready to admit that you may be wrong. Whatever you decide, however, you must temporarily have full confidence in your method, put money on the line, and act decisively. Sometimes thinking independently is lonesome and scary, but in order to be on the winning side, you have no other choice but to go your own way. So think optimistically. Do not run away like most people. Give it your best shot and think of ways to make a profit while the masses are fearfully and hopelessly getting ready for a crash.

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June 14, 2006

Nothing is easy to the unwilling.

  • Thomas Fuller -

The Rush of the Pit

The pits at the exchange are exciting. Traders frantically move about the floor, buying and selling. It’s exciting to watch. You can feel the energy and it can psych you up just by watching. Well, that depends. Some people may find it noisy and anxiety provoking rather than energizing. The frantic motions of the traders may put them on edge. The environment in which you trade does make a difference. Everyone has his or her own personality and preferences. Some may seek out hustle and bustle while others may prefer quiet serenity. It’s important to decide which environment you prefer and create an environment conducive to your style.

There isn’t just one right way to trade. Some people prefer constant action while others prefer a quiet, meditative approach to trading. Some traders prefer to do extensive backtesting in a serene atmosphere. They love to just quietly sit by themselves and study charts. When it comes to placing the trades, they may actually call a broker rather than place the trade themselves. Indeed, some professional traders who prefer a concrete, data-driven approach to trading actually dislike placing trades. They prefer to call a broker to place the trade. To them, the enjoyment of trading is in developing a sound strategy, rather than taking the action to place the trade. Again, there’s no one right way to trade. What is right for you may not be right for someone else. It’s just a matter of knowing what you prefer and matching your trading style to your preference.

There’s no right or wrong way to trade. Some traders prefer safety. They prefer to trade only during a solid bull market where everyone is enthusiastic and the indexes go nowhere but up. But the markets don’t always go up, and there are times when you have to think creatively and go your own way. To trade like a winner, you must think outside the box, guessing what the crowd will do next, and anticipating how the movement of the masses can benefit you. The astute trader knows when to follow the crowd and when to go against it. The crowd is usually right, until the market trend turns. Some analysts are saying that we are in a turning point right now. It may be that an overvalued market is correcting or it may be that the economy is going to head south. Whatever it is, many are planning for a crash, maybe not a big crash but a little one at least.

The environment you decide to trade in is critical to your success. Some prefer a quiet environment where they can think clearly. Others need action and excitement. Which do you prefer? Whatever environment you find helps you trade with an optimal mental edge is the one that you should cultivate.

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grt…

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For after all, the best thing one can do when it’s raining is to let it rain.

  • Henry Wadworth Longfellow -

June 16th - 2006

It’s Not Personal

Have you ever lost big on a few trades and thought, “I need to win it all back right now”? When this happens, your emotions start to take hold. You may even start thinking about seeking “revenge on the markets,” but such overly emotional responses have no place in trading. It is useful to cultivate a more objective, unemotional approach when trading the markets.

Emotions and money often go hand in hand, and our feelings toward money often bleed into our trading lives. For example, have you ever compared how it feels to spend cash to pay all expenses rather than credit cards? When you pay expenses with credit cards, it’s easy to forget you are spending real money. The money can start to lose some of its meaning. It sort seems like spending play money. Doling out the actual cash with each purchase, in contrast, makes you see exactly how much money is being spent. You feel differently about it. Spending actual money raises your awareness. The money is less abstract and tangible. It’s easier to spend. Although treating money so cavalierly can lead to problems with spending in everyday life, such an attitude toward money can be useful when trading. It allows you to look at the money as objectively and abstractly as possible, just as percentage points or ticks. It eases some of the pressure and helps you get up quickly after a setback knocks you down.

There are a few simple things you can do to maintain an objective view toward trading capital. Many say that when money is committed to a trade and the risk and potential loss is experienced, “objectivity goes out the window.” Thus, anything you can do to minimize the feeling of risk and potential loss will help you look at the markets more objectively. First, it’s helpful to trade with money you can afford to lose. Trading is a profession where you should go in expecting to lose. If you can’t afford to lose the money you trade, it will be difficult to maintain objectivity. Deep down, you will know that you just can’t afford to lose in a worst-case scenario. Feelings of uncertainty and fear will gnaw at you. Second, it is also crucial to manage your risk. By carefully managing risk on any single trade, you call tell yourself, “I’ve got little to worry about. I can afford to take the loss.” At first you may have to consciously remind yourself of this fact (again, make sure it is a fact), but over time it will automatically be in the back of your mind. You will be calmer, and can more easily cultivate an objective mindset. Finally, view profits and loses in an abstract framework. Rather than focusing on concrete dollar amounts, try to focus on percentages, or just abstract, theoretical numbers. Don’t think of the dollar amounts in terms of what can be purchased. Equating dollar amounts in terms of tangible terms, such as car payments or sought-after luxury items, will weaken your objective mindset. You’ll be more prone to experience elation from big wins and disappointment from losses. So don’t let emotions get the better of you. Cultivate an objective mindset. You’ll trade more calmly, creatively, and profitably.

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Thanks dear

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June 19, 2006

Every now and then go away, even briefly, have a little relaxation, for when you come back to your work your judgment will be surer; since to remain constantly at work will cause you to lose power.

  • Leonardo da Vinci -

The Proper Mindset: Getting Back On Track After a Bad Day

Have you ever had a bad day and wanted to stand aside until the feeling passed? Sometimes it is a good idea. It may be necessary to take a break, relax, contemplate, and refocus on the task at hand. The winning trader trades freely and effortlessly and it is vital to trade with such a mindset. Traders are similar to star athletes who perform at their best, or musicians who are virtuosos. What these people have in common is that they can focus their attention on the task at hand; inadequacies, conflicts, or current life stressors do not easily distract them. The more you can remove stress and anxiety in your life, the more easily you can trade effortlessly with a focused, concerted manner. Some of the conditions you need to address are unconscious and involve a certain amount of reflection, but other conditions are just a matter of the right attitude. A winning approach to trading is often just a matter of approaching trading by following some basic guidelines.

A key guideline is to think in probabilities. Don’t focus on the outcome of a single trade. Think optimistically about the bigger picture. You may lose on a single trade, but if you are trading with sound trading strategies, you will come out ahead across a series of trades. It’s this long-term perspective you need to focus on, not the short-term transitory outcomes. Remember that your overall success is the bottom line. You must strategically execute trade after trade in a calm and logical manner to make the law of averages work in your favor.

It’s also vital to control your risk. Successful traders risk only a small percentage of their trading capital on a single trade, for example. Limiting the risk on a single trade further relieves some of the pressure; you are less likely to feel that every trade must pay off big. Trading a detailed trading plan is also important. When you know what you are going to do and when you are going to do it, you’ll feel more in control. If you leave parts of your trading plan unspecified, you’ll feel a sense of uneasiness. And in all likelihood, you’ll not be able to follow your plan easily. Your discipline will falter. It’s essential that you plan out when to enter and when to exit. Once you have a clear idea of when you’ll decide to enter a trade and what signals indicate you should exit, you will be able to focus more easily on monitoring the trade and taking decisive action.

There’s also a psychological aspect to trading like a winner, and sometimes it’s important to just remember some common human tendencies to think “irrationally.” For example, there’s a human need to avoid loss and this need is often manifested in the need to be right. But don’t be afraid to admit you are wrong. And don’t think that you must capitalize on every opportunity to make a profit. These expectations are so high that they can be cause fear and anxiety. When you hold such high expectations for your performance, you place too much pressure on yourself, and it interferes with your train of thought. By trading under the right mental conditions, you stay calm and trade more profitably.

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June 20th 2006

Playing With Fire

As you trade the markets, it’s vital to trade calmly and with confidence. If you constantly worry about failing or losing money, you will sabotage your efforts and end up losing in the end. That said, you don’t want to be too overconfident. The overconfident trader is the naïve trader. In the back of your mind, you should always remember that trading is like playing with fire.

At a party last month, I was talking with a young woman about her retirement plans. She made a good salary, but not high by any means. She proudly told me that she had saved and invested $50,000 in the markets. Unfortunately, she seemed to also think that the markets were as secure as a bank account. Understandably, she became a little perturbed with me when I suggested that she was taking a potentially huge risk, and could possibly lose a few years worth of savings if the market had turned dramatically. My point isn’t to pessimistically deride the markets, but to point out that trading requires risks, and taking risks doesn’t always work in your favor.

An astute Innerworth subscriber pointed out last week that not everyone can trade successfully. That’s true. As we have pointed out in numerous columns, many are called to the trading profession, but relatively few end up profitable in the end. It is important to remember that you are taking a risk and that you can lose. You must look at your financial resources, innate trading talents, and your commitment, and find a trading or investment approach that matches your resources and abilities. For some, that may be short-term trading, and for others, that may mean long-term investing.

If you are a novice, short-term trader, you may not want to jump in headfirst until you check things out. You may want to paper trade or make small practice trades to gauge your skill level before risking years’ worth of savings. For example, in an interview with Innerworth, Tom Joseph of Advanced GET advised short-term traders to risk money that they could afford to lose. Again, it may sound pessimistic, but losses are commonplace when trading. For your own safety, you should prepare mentally and physically for a worst-case scenario, and make sure you can live with the consequences. Decide how much you can afford to lose, and if you do risk money, use protective stops or other financial instruments to minimize your losses. If you have trouble handling stress, or have trouble controlling your emotions while under pressure, you especially want to limit your risk, and may want to consider long-term investing rather than short-term trading. But again, the key is to be aware of the downside.

Trading is a rewarding activity. It is intellectually challenging and if you have a knack for trading, it can pay off financially as well. But trading isn’t fun if you lose so much money that you can’t recover. Trading is a lot like playing with fire. If you aren’t careful you can get burned badly.

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June 21th 2006

If you don’t follow the stock market, you are missing some amazing drama.

  • Mark Cuban -

A Daily Routine
When most traders look back at their trading errors, and wonder why they happened, they often find that they knew how to put themselves in an optimal mindset, but they did not do so. Instead, they tried to trade under conditions that were not conducive to winning. If you want to trade at your peak, though, it’s useful to follow a daily routine so as to enter the proper state of mind.

Trading in a peak performance mindset requires you to be rested, energized and ready to tackle the endless challenges the markets put in front of you. Although it is common these days to try to get away with only a minimal amount of sleep, it is not a good idea. But trading is stressful, and combating stress requires psychological stamina and physical energy. When you are well rested, you have increased energy levels needed to cope with stress. You’ll find that if you get to bed early, and wake up early, you’ll have the energy you need to tackle unexpected setbacks with grace.

Many traders like to get up early and do a quick workout before they start trading. It gets their mind and body moving, and releases pent up energy. Exercise allows you to have the calm energy you need to focus on and concentrate fully on the market action.

Once your physical needs are met, you can start dealing with your psychological needs. Some traders prefer to get their mind moving by scanning a few charts before they start to trade. Merely looking at charts can start your creative juices flowing. Other traders prefer to look through their trading plans. Before the markets open, it’s useful to prepare your mind to focus on trading.

Some traders have a routine to get their emotions and mood under control. A good way to cultivate a confident attitude, for example, is to read through a set of affirmations such as “I am worthy. I have the ability to trade skillfully.” Other traders may look through a list of past winning trades to remind them of their past accomplishments.

Starting the trading day also requires a routine. Some traders make a few small, practice trades at the open as a warm-up to bigger trades, while others stay away completely. It’s important to find what you prefer and to stick with it. If you find that you can’t trade the open successfully, then wait until an optimal time of day when you are most comfortable trading. The key is to increase your odds of success by trading under the conditions that enhance your performance.

It is essential to do whatever you can to enter a peak performance mindset that will help you trade like a winner. Whether it’s frequent exercise, trading only on certain days of the week, or standing aside until encountering optimal trading conditions, it’s useful to stick to the daily routine that helps you trade at your best.

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Found a really nice article, adding it to this thread even though it is not part of innerworth.

Abraham Germansky was a multimillionaire real estate developer in 1920s. He also loved stocks, betting heavily as the market boomed. As the crash of 1929 unfolded, he was wiped out.

And that was basically the end of Abraham Germansky.

Germansky disappeared on October 24th, 1929. The New York Times posted a short story near the back of its October 26th edition, with Germansky’s lawyer, Bernard Sandler, asking for information on his whereabouts. It tells a powerful story in just a few words:

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Later that week another investor in the same city had a very different experience.

Jesse Livermore returned home on October 29th to a wife who, seeing news of the day’s record market crash, was prepared to console her husband and return to a life of frugality.

Jesse said that wasn’t necessary. He was short the market and made more money in the crash of 1929 than during the rest of his life combined.

“You mean we are not ruined?” his wife asked, according to Livermore’s biography.

He replied: “No darling, I have just had my best ever trading day – we are fabulously rich and can do whatever we like.” He made, in one day, the equivalent of $3 billion.

Polar opposite stories. Germansky went broke, Livermore became the richest man in the world.

But fast-forward four years and the stories end up nearly identical.

Livermore made larger and larger bets, and went on to lose everything in the stock market. Broke and ashamed, he disappeared for two days in 1933. His wife set out to find him. “Jesse L. Livermore, the stock market operator, of 1100 Park Avenue missing and has not been seen since 3pm yesterday,” the New York Times wrote in 1933. He returned, but his path was set. Livermore eventually took his own life.

The timing was different, but Germansky and Livermore shared the realization that getting rich is one thing. Staying rich is quite another.

Everything in the economy is cyclical. Nothing great or terrible is likely to stay that way for long, because the same forces that cause things to be great or terrible also plant the seeds to push them the other way.

Bull markets make stocks expensive, expensive stocks leave little room for error, and little room for error increases the odds of bull markets ending. Same thing in the other direction. Recessions cause pessimism. Pessimism causes underproduction, underproduction leads to scarcity, scarcity leads to a new boom.

People and companies, whose behaviors are changed by their own success, are vulnerable to the same cycles.

I’ve noticed a pattern: Getting rich can be the biggest impediment to staying rich.

It goes like this. The more successful you are at something, the more convinced you become that you’re doing it right. The more convinced you are that you’re doing it right, the less open you are to change. The less open you are to change, the more likely you are to tripping in a world that changes all the time.

There are a million ways to get rich. But there’s only one way to stay rich: Humility, often to the point of paranoia. The irony is that few things squash humility like getting rich in the first place.

It’s why the composition of Dow Jones companies changes so much over time, and why the Forbes list of billionaires has 60% turnover per decade.

Andy Grove, Intel’s founder, put it this way: “Business success contains the seeds of its own destruction.” Scrappiness and the ability to think differently turns into complacency and the desire to keep things the same. Harvard Business Review wrote about Grove’s management philosophy in 1996:

Grove believes that at least some fear is healthy—especially in organizations that have had a history of success. Fear can be a healthy antidote to the complacency that success often breeds. A touch of paranoia—a suspicion that the world is changing against you—is what Grove prescribes.

Michael Moritz, the billionaire head of Sequoia Capital, was asked by Charlie Rose why Sequoia was so successful. Moritz mentioned longevity, noting that some VC firms succeed for five or ten years, but Sequoia has prospered for four decades. Rose asked why that was:

Moritz : I think we’ve always been afraid of going out of business.

Rose : Really? So it’s fear? Only the paranoid survive?

Moritz: There’s a lot of truth to that … We assume that tomorrow won’t be like yesterday. We can’t afford to rest on our laurels. We can’t be complacent. We can’t assume that yesterday’s success translates into tomorrow’s good fortune.

Not skill, or market insight, or even hard work. Fear and humility.

Humility doesn’t mean taking fewer risks. Sequoia takes as big of risks today as it did 30 years ago. But it’s taken risks in new industries, with new approaches, and new partners, cognizant that work worked yesterday isn’t what will work tomorrow.

IBM and Xerox did this when they shifted from hardware to services.

Netflix did it when it cannibalized its DVD business to invest in streaming.

GE has reinvented itself about every 20 years for the last century, going from a lightbulb company to a dishwasher company to a bank to a wind turbine company.

Each could have looked at their past success and concluded they were doing the right thing, patting themselves on the back. But they didn’t. They were, for the most part, paranoid, eager and willing to jettison past success in an attempt to keep up with where the world was heading next.

It’s not easy to do.

For decades people used Coke, Gillette, and American Express as examples of companies whose success was so solidified – whose moats were so deep and protected – that you could foresee their dominance indefinitely. But now all three are under attack. Coke’s is fighting 13 consecutive years of soda decline. Dollar Shave Club came out of nowhere to take 14 percentage points of market share away from Gillette. And as Charlie Munger, one of AmEx’s largest investors said this week: “If you think you know what the state of the payments system will be 10 years out you’re in a state of delusion.” Only the paranoid survive.

We don’t know much about Abraham Germansky – only that he went from rich, to broke, to disappeared. But we know a lot about Livermore, whose life was well documented.

Livermore was was one of the most skilled people in the world at getting rich. But few people in the early 20th century had a harder time staying rich. He made and lost at least four fortunes, never going more than eight years without flirting with bankruptcy.

After his third wipeout, Livermore recognized his mistake: Getting rich made him feel invincible, and feeling invincible led him to double-down with leverage on what worked in the recent past, which was catastrophic when the world changed and the market turned against him.

He reflected:

I sometimes think that no price is too high for a speculator to pay to learn that which will keep him from getting the swelled head. A great many smashes by brilliant men can be traced directly to the swelled head.

“It’s an expensive disease everywhere to everybody” he said.

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June 22nd 2006

Have confidence that if you have done a little thing well, you can do a bigger thing well too.

  • David Storey -

High Morale

Dick tells his trading coach, “I just want to give up. My friend John takes out $2,000 a week as a trader, and I can barely break even. I’m a failure and I can’t take it anymore.” Ever feel like Dick? Perhaps you’ve been trading for a year, or even five years, and your performance just doesn’t match your expectations. If you compare yourself to others, or if you set a goal that is virtually impossible to reach, you will indeed feel like giving up. If you want to give up, that’s fine. But if you want to continue to pursue financial success, here is a plan for building up your morale.

If you want to be successful, the worst thing you can do is to believe that you have to live up to external standards, expectations of others or unrealistic expectations for yourself. Even if you say, “I’ve got to trade like a Market Wizard,” it’s an external standard. Don’t try to be anyone but you. Many traders make the mistake of thinking that trading is like running a race in which they have to beat out other competitors. But comparing yourself to others is not productive and lowers your morale. You don’t know what talents, financial resources, and skills other people have that you don’t. People are different from you, and may actually have more resources. Perhaps their parents left them an inheritance that finances their trades. Or maybe they are the child of a trader and informally started learning how to trade as a youngster. Who knows? Just accept the fact that you may be at a disadvantage compared to others, and that you may need to work harder to overcome these disadvantages. The difference between winners and losers is that winners are determined to define success on their own terms and do whatever they can to reach their goals, while losers feel like a victim and are obsessed with how they got a raw deal in life. So stop comparing yourself to others and run your own race.

Another important way to improve your morale is to have the attitude that trading is a skill that can be learned. Although some people appear to be natural born traders, it does not mean that you will never learn to trade. It may take time and effort, but you can learn how to make profits. You may not be an overnight success, but through persistence and hard work, you’ll learn how to make the profits you desire. That doesn’t mean that you should be overconfident and risk large amounts of money you can’t afford to lose, but it does mean setting personal goals that you can reach at your own pace. For some people, that may mean spending time learning about how to trade before they trade in earnest. Rather than make trades and expect to take home huge profits, a more realistic goal may be to merely put on small practice trades to get a feel for the markets. Will you make money? No, but you will gain valuable experience. You may naturally ask, “Why spend the money to trade if I’m not going to make any profits?” Look at it like tuition. Most professions require education. It’s also true with trading. You will need to spend money on tuition to get the training you need, but eventually, you will learn enough about the profession to trade like a seasoned professional.

It’s easy to feel discouraged as a trader, but if you want to be one of the few who make it, then you must cultivate an optimistic attitude, set realistic goals, and work hard to achieve them. So don’t engage in self-pity. Do whatever you need to in order to make your aspirations a reality.

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June 23, 2006

I will clean house when Sears comes out with a riding vacuum cleaner - Roseanne Barr.

Cleaning Your Psychological House

Have you ever made trading errors because you couldn’t concentrate? Perhaps out of the blue you suddenly lost confidence. The economic times we live in can shake anyone’s confidence. Sometimes we have big rallies, like on Tuesday-Wednesday, but other times the market has been bearish. The times are uncertain. Is the economy going to change? How will people adjust to interest rate changes? How will the masses perceive the inevitable changes to come? There is an aura of uncertainty in the air, and unless you are psychologically grounded, the instability and uncertainty of the times can catch you off guard.

When you have put on a trade, it’s essential to stay focused on monitoring it. You must be able to accurately perceive the signals that indicate the market is going against you, and you must act expediently to protect yourself. That can be difficult to do during uncertain times. One reason some people get thrown off track is because they are not firmly grounded psychologically. They are prone to feel self-doubt, wavering confidence, or a lack of commitment. And when they feel this way, they have great difficulty effortlessly executing a trading plan and managing a trade. Although it’s essentially impossible to drive out all psychological conflicts from your psyche, it’s useful to try to resolve as many psychological conflicts as possible, so that they don’t intrude into your consciousness, and interfere with your ability to focus on the trade.

When you have a psychological conflict, it’s in your best interest to resolve it as soon as possible; otherwise it just lies there in the back of your mind, taking up precious, limited psychological energy. By identifying psychological issues before the trading day, you can decrease the possibility of these issues catching you off guard during moments of stress. How can you cope with conflicts, uncertainty and self-doubt? It’s hard to just push these conflicts completely out of your consciousness and pretend they don’t exist. Ironically, the more you try to deny the existence of these conflicts, the more psychological energy you will waste. Rather than trying to ignore conflicts, it’s better to acknowledge and face them head on. Most of the time, the mere acknowledgement of your conflicts will produce a quick resolution.

What are some common conflicts? Every trader at one time or another questions his or her talents as a trader. Did you make a win due to luck or talent? Perhaps the win was due to a combination of both. Wavering confidence can reflect a variety of issues. For some, it is a lack of experience with the markets. Time helps build confidence. For others, a lack of confidence reflects long standing issues. A person may have always questioned his or her ability to perform well. Under times of stress and uncertainty, these issues creep up.

When the markets change as they have been during the past year, it’s natural to question one’s abilities. You may think, “Perhaps I was a good trader at one time, but the market conditions have changed and I may not be able to live up to my expectations of trading profitably.” This perspective may be true or it may be false, but regardless of the validity, allowing such a belief to remain in the back of one’s mind takes up psychological energy. It’s better to acknowledge the possibility, and if it is false, remind yourself that it is absurd, or if it is true, take the necessary steps (such as learning new trading methods) to prove it wrong.

Few of us are ever completely free of conflict and doubt. Trading the markets is stressful and uncertain. The natural human response is to wonder if you can perform at your peak. Conflict and self-doubt are always there, lurking below your awareness. And when you are in a vulnerable mood, such as during times of market uncertainty, these beliefs can move from the back of your mind to the forefront in an instant. It’s not useful to ignore these potentially distracting psychological issues. It’s better to acknowledge them up front. Once you do, you are more likely to be able to say to yourself, “that may be true, but it is of no consequence right now.” Then, you better spend some time during your “off hours” dealing with it. Conflicts in the back of your mind can have a powerful impact on your ability to focus on your trading. Make sure that you face your conflicts, spend time examining them, and try to resolve them. If you can do so effectively, you’ll be able to handle market uncertainty with grace.

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Nithin here is snapshot of the website innerworth.com showing “Innerworth Advisory Board”

https://web.archive.org/web/20070116152214/http://www.innerworth.com/

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Yep, I have reached them many times to get hold of the entire repository with no success.

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Hello Nithin,
You found me. I am the owner of Innerworth and own the IP. Reach out to me and we can talk. David Nassar Marketwise.

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@marketwise @nithin

Wow!
Hoping some sort of an integration can happen between Zerodha and Innerworth.

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This was quite a goldmine. @nithin Thanks for sharing. Do you know or can share any websites, book, magazines or newsletter which contains stuff like like and is easily accessible?

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Innerworth was shut down years ago my friend.

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Innerworth might be shut down, but when the owner of Innerworth reaches out to Nithin. You only can hope for some sort of a collaboration especially with all the good collaborations Zerodha has already made.

Hope is a good thing :slight_smile:

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i doubt if that is really the owner of Innerworth.

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Haha :smiley: If he is really not the owner, then that’s just a cheap prank to play.
Anyway, let’s see.

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