In any sport, you as a player grow into your own personal style of play, and that style as you become better and better becomes your trademark. In the stock market, the same is true, and it is important that you stick to your trademark style regardless of how “good” you really believe you are. I have found that my trademark is based on the technical trading of stocks priced anywhere from $.02 a share to $2.50 a share. Recently though, I let my confidence become bloated with a trade, but my trademark style was no where to be found; a costly mistake.
I was up over 20% for the month of January, and wanted to go out with a bang. Instead of trading my signature style, I decided to go big or go home on a short play (which I have very little live experience in). I made the right call on the stock, and it did fall, but not before running up 5% and forcing me to cover. Not only did I leverage myself on margin to make the trade, but I also gave up all of my gains from January. The mistake was a big one, but an important one because it made me realize that regardless of how “good” I think I am, changing my style with three minutes left in the game isn’t going to help me make the game winning goal.
I was thinking about it at 3 AM (a time when I have a lot of my epiphanies about life) and thought of what I think to be a good analogy. In hockey, players will change skates, change sticks, or even change diets to try to get better. All of these enhancements though are centered on that player’s personal style. Just because they have a new stick, doesn’t mean they are going to skate at the net any differently to shoot. With your personal stock strategy, you will make a lot of adjustments to improve your win percentage, but that win percentage is still centered on your trademark style. Making a total U-turn will only take you in the wrong direction. My realization then is this; don’t let overconfidence take you to change your trademark style when that style is what made you so successful in the first place. It is good to be confident, but remember only to tweak that style, not do a full 180; you’re only going to run into on coming traffic.
Take this lesson to heart; it may save you money down the line when you think your skills are at their peak. I know it personally was a big blow to my portfolio, wiping out my huge run for the month. But, that’s the way it goes sometimes. Now to start driving in the right direction again…
Closing Thought – “Don’t let overconfidence take you to change your trademark style when that style is what made you so successful in the first place. It is good to be confident, but remember only to tweak that style, not do a full 180; you’re only going to run into on coming traffic.”