Trading Psychology#psychology#behavioural finance#biases

Understanding Behavioural Finance: The Psychology of Investing

7 min read
Understanding Behavioural Finance: The Psychology of Investing

Why Psychology Matters in Trading

Markets are driven by human emotions—fear, greed, hope, and regret. Understanding behavioral biases can give you a significant edge.

Common Cognitive Biases

Confirmation Bias

Seeking information that confirms your existing beliefs while ignoring contradicting evidence.

  • You buy a stock and only read bullish news
  • You ignore red flags because you're already invested
  • Fix: Actively seek opposing viewpoints

Loss Aversion

Losses feel twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good:

  • Holding losing positions too long
  • Selling winners too early
  • Fix: Use predetermined stop-losses

Herd Mentality

Following the crowd without independent analysis:

  • Buying at market tops because "everyone is making money"
  • Panic selling at bottoms
  • Fix: Have a written trading plan

Anchoring

Fixating on a specific price point:

  • "The stock was ₹500 last month, so ₹400 is cheap"
  • Ignoring that fundamentals may have changed
  • Fix: Reassess based on current conditions

Overconfidence

Overestimating your ability to predict markets:

  • Trading too frequently
  • Taking oversized positions
  • Ignoring risk management
  • Fix: Track your actual performance objectively

The Disposition Effect

Traders tend to:

  • Sell winners too early (fear of losing gains)
  • Hold losers too long (hope for recovery)
  • This is the opposite of "cut losses, let winners run"

How to Overcome Biases

  • Maintain a trading journal
  • Follow a systematic approach
  • Use checklists before entering trades
  • Review decisions regularly (not just outcomes)
  • Automate where possible

Conclusion

The best traders aren't necessarily the smartest—they're the most self-aware. Understanding your psychological biases is the first step to overcoming them.

psychologybehavioural financebiases