These 2 Underrated Concepts Are So Important To Successful Investing

You may have heard people say, “I hate losing more than I like winning.”

While you’ll often hear them say this about sports or something competitive, this concept has been thoroughly studied. Turns out, our brains are wired to experience pain from loss more than the joy of winning. And it’s precisely this sort of thinking that often causes investors to lose their shirt.

Of course, nobody likes to lose, especially when it comes to money. But that fear of loss overcomes our rational self and greatly decreases the probability of success.

You see it happen in the sports world all the time. A team is up big and it begins playing “not to lose.” Instead of continuing to do what got them into the winning position in the first place, they seize up. The fear of losing the lead — and the game — overcomes them. Sometimes they squeak by with a narrow win, other times they give up the lead entirely.

In investing, it’s a human tendency to behave irrationally when it comes to taking profits and losses. According to Economics Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman, this is known as “prospect theory.” (My colleague Brad Briggs wrote more about mental mistakes that can hurt your portfolio, in this article.)

One of the hardest things to do is keep your emotions from clouding your judgment. Once you allow emotions to get the better of you, you lose your confidence, self-doubt creeps in and you begin second-guessing yourself with every investment or move you make. Emotions make you question everything you’re doing in the markets… especially during turbulent times.

That’s why today I want to talk about a couple of simple things you can do that can help put your mind at ease and prepare you for when the next bout of volatility hits.

Understanding Losses And Risk Management

Nobody likes to be wrong. And taking a loss is proving exactly that… that you were wrong.

It’s been proven that investors tend to sell their winners too early. It satisfies their desire to be right. They also hold on to their losers too long. After all, as long as you don’t sell, you still haven’t admitted that you were wrong.

The simple fact is that we as investors will be wrong. It happens to the best of us. And chances are good that we’ll be wrong quite often. But as prominent investing magnate George Soros once said, “It’s not about being right or wrong, rather, it’s about how much money you make when you’re right and how much you don’t lose when you’re wrong.”

One of the simplest and most effective ways to protect your capital is through risk management. Establish strict sell or loss parameters and follow them.

One popular risk management method is the 2% rule. This means you never put more than 2% of your account equity at risk in any single trade. For example, if you are trading a $50,000 account, you only risk $1,000 on any given trade. The great thing about this rule is that if you stick to it, you would have to make dozens of consecutive losing trades in order to literally go broke. And even for a novice investor, this is highly unlikely to happen.

Keep in mind that the 2% number is arbitrary; you can adjust it to fit your level of risk tolerance. But it provides investors with a foundation on which to make trading decisions.

Putting It Into Practice

For instance, say you wanted to buy shares of Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and you only wanted to risk $1,000, or 2% of a $50,000 portfolio. You set your exit or stop-loss at 20% (another arbitrary number that can be adjusted based on your risk tolerance). You can now figure out how large of a position, or how many shares you will buy.

To find this number you first divide 100 by your stop loss, in this case 20, which results in five. Then you take that number — five — and multiply it by the amount you want to risk, $1,000.

Five times $1,000 is $5,000, which means you can buy $5,000 worth of Apple stock… or 50 shares if the stock is trading at $100 per share.

If Apple declines 20%, you’ll lose about $1,000 and exit the position.

But let’s say that you want to use a smaller stop-loss, like 13%, on your Apple position. Here’s how the math works…

— 100 divided by 13 equals 7.7.

— 7.7 times $1,000 equals $7,700.

— $7,700 divided by the share price, $100, equals about 77 shares.

Action To Take

The point is, determining the proper position size before placing a trade will not only dramatically impact your trading results, but it will help put your mind at ease. Yet most individual investors don’t even bother to take this step.

If you can master the art of understanding losses and position sizing — you will be leaps and bounds ahead of other investors. To be sure, these are guidelines that can be, and should be, used by investors of all shapes and sizes. Plus, having a plan in place will help you sleep better at night during market drawdowns, knowing that you aren’t taking extraordinary risks with your capital.

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