Gold & SP500 Psychology: They Bail, We Buy
Understanding market psychology is crucial for a trader’s
success. But so many people get caught up in the daily market volatility, media
coverage and “noise” of the trading environment, it’s almost impossible to not
think and trade in agreement with the majority of traders.
However, effective technical analysis allows us to use
trends, patterns and other indicators to evaluate the market's
current psychological state.
Fortunately, this analysis can both enable us to independently forecast whether the market is heading in
an upward or downward trend and do so against the grain of the
majority.
It takes a disciplined trader to be able to watch and listen
to the market doing one thing, filter out the noise, then do the opposite - all
in a controlled manor. To this day I still find myself fighting the herd
mentality at times and that is when I step away from the computer and regroup.
I have a simple rule that has saved me thousands over the
years. I would rather miss a trade and learn what caused me to get confused,
then to take a loss.
Rule # 1 - When in
Doubt, Stay Out!
There are two types
of traders:
- Herd Mentality
Trader – Someone who trades off fear and greed buying near tops and panic
selling out at the bottom with the masses.
- Black
Sheep Trader – A trader who stand apart from the masses and trades
opposite to the “herd” during extreme levels.
Last weeks market action really allowed us to see which way the
masses were moving. The extremely high selling volume and sharp price decline
notified us that the market was trading off FEAR. And, last Thursday we
actually saw PANIC which tells us the balance of the market (retail investors,
John Doe’s, The “Herd”) were exiting their positions.
When we see this happen, it’s generally a good time to start
scaling into long positions, as most of the down side has already happened.
I have been talking about an ABC retrace pattern for the
indexes and gold for some time and last week we got just that. An ABC retrace
is when we have 3 waves which are, down, small up, then another leg down.
In short this wave breaks the uptrend of higher highs and
lows, as it forms a lower low telling novice traders to sell and go short. This
is what causes the high volume and sharp sell offs.
Below are a few charts showing the 2009 July lows and where
we are now, February 2010:
SP500 – Daily Trading Chart

SP500 – Daily Trading Chart

SP500 – Daily Trading Chart

SP500 – Daily Trading Chart

Intraday Price Action
– If you want to see some exciting intraday trading charts check out the
setups last week: http://www.thegoldandoilguy.com/articles/how-to-trade-intraday-gold-and-sp500/
Market Psychology
Trading Conclusion:
Most get involved with the stock market because it looks
like something they can quickly learn and start making money from home. But it
doesn’t take long before they quickly realize there is more to trading than
meets the eye.
While trading looks easy from a glance, in actuality I think
its one of the toughest jobs out there.
Why? Well, this is
what you are up against:
- You
are trying to predict something that is unpredictable
- You
are trading against millions of other highly skilled traders
- You
are trading against automated computers with complex algorithms
- You
are trading with your hard earned money which causes fear and greed
- You
must accept losing trades as that is part of the business
- You
must trade with a proven trading strategy and follow the system
- You
must understand money management and apply it to every trade
- You
must truly love the market cause it will break you down mentally
I don’t want to say you must be a contrarian, but in reality
you must do the opposite of the masses during times of extreme price behavior.
These extremes happen on a daily basis when trading intraday
charts and every 4-6 weeks when looking at daily charts. The toughest part is
to pull the trigger when emotions are flying high in the market and you are
looking to do the opposite. It takes several trades before you even start to
get comfortable doing this.
I hope this helps shed some light on market psychology.
If you would like to receive my Trading Newsletter and Analysis
please visit my website: www.GoldAndOilGuy.com
Chris Vermeulen