Trading psychologist extraordinaire Brett Steenbarger had an excellent post yesterday relating sports psychology to trading. I highly recommend it to anybody in the trading game.
This paragraph struck a cord with me:
"The finding that experts in a particular sport are better than novices, not merely at physical skills but also on the underlying perceptual, cognitive, and strategic components of sport, is robust in both laboratory and field research" (quoting Dr. Janet Starkes). In other words, when people become skilled, they literally learn to see things in new ways and think in new ways. It's not just a difference of hardware (having better memory, vision, or concentration); experts develop their own software: internal programs that enable them to recognize patterns and act upon them rapidly.
Here is some of my own anecdotal evidence. During my sophomore year, I was the most talented player on my high school basketball team. I knew it, my teammates knew it, and my coach knew it. When we played on the playgrounds, I was almost always the first or second pick and would dominate the games. However, during a camp before the season, these same players "schooled" me. It was disheartening and I was completely embarrassed. I was the guy that would screw up, get blasted by the coach and have to run extra to make up for my mistakes.
One day after practice, the coach called me into his office and explained to me that the kids I was playing with had been a part of school's feeder system and had been playing organized ball since they were seven years old (I had never played because my parents wanted me to focus on studies). They had a better "feel" for the game and could see things that I couldn't. The only way I'd make the team was by working on my "basketball IQ".
After this talk, I dedicated myself to understanding the game. Not only would I attend my own team's practices, I would sit in on the freshman and junior varsity practices. I taped tons of college and NBA games and devoured every book on basketball strategy I could find. My parents even shelled out some big bucks so I could attend the Michael Jordan camp.
It all paid off. By the end of the season, I understood things about the game that I was clueless about before. For example, I learned that basketball is a game of different speeds and misdirection. Whereas before I would run to a spot and cut all in one speed, I'd now go half speed to the spot and explode on the cut. Before the cut, I would look at the player guarding the lane. If he was eying the guy with the ball and not taking in the entire court, I knew the lane would be open.
Here is another "pattern" that I had figured out through watching tapes and repetition in practice. If a player guarded me with his right foot way in front of his left, I knew he liked to push the ballhandler to the right and was susceptible to a crossover. I would be able to drive into the lane at will against this guy. This, and the observation above, is something I had never thought about before. Now, it was second nature. You could say I had an "internal program" that would process the patterns in a way that would never work if I actually had to ask myself "where is his foot" during a game.
I can see this starting to happen in trading as well. Maybe it's because of my background and the need I feel to practice, but I rarely use scans, although many are readily available to me. Every night I start charting by looking at sectors that interest me for one reason or another. From there, I go through all the stocks in those sectors (I like to use prophet.net for this). This used to take a long time, as I would go through what I was looking for in each individual stock, point by point. Now, I look at a chart and within a few seconds I either toss it and move on or put it in my watchlist for further study. It doesn't even feel like I'm thinking anymore. I just "know" that stock works for me. It's the "internal program" again. Interestingly, I don't use indicators on my prelimary "toss or watch" analysis, but when I later scrutinize the "watch" stocks with indicators, they almost always are at important levels (for instance, an oversold Stochastic or diverging MACD).
The moral of this longwinded story is that it's not the most talented players that become champions, it's the players with the best understanding of the game. This applies to any field, including our own. You gain that understanding with a strong work ethic, practice and in-depth analysis. Hey, if you don't believe me, ask yourself this question: Why is it that Larry Bird has plenty of championship hardware while the likes of J.R. Rider and Christian Laettner have none? Or for the non-sports inclined, why is it that Marty Schwartz can make millions trading while so many high IQ'ed doctors and lawyers come away from trading scarred for life? I'm willing to bet it has a little something to do with what we just talked about.
Again, please make sure to read the good doctor's post, and apply his teaching to your own trading.
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