Everyone who trades does it to make a profit, not to generate losses. This applies both to traders who make trading their primary job and those who use it as a way to generate additional income.
This might be a question many traders have. If the goal is to profit, why is risk management emphasized so much more in trading? There are even dedicated sessions about how traders should manage losses while trading.
If the main goal is to generate profits, shouldn't the priority be learning how to make those profits?
Actually, the answer is found within the question itself.
Because every trader aims to generate profit, they tend to expect they will make money when they trade. Simply put, traders are always ready to accept profits.
On the other hand, since loss is not a goal at all, no trader expects to lose. There isn't a single trader who, when opening a position, believes it will harm them financially. Therefore, no trader is prepared to face losses.
When traders aren't prepared for the possibility of experiencing losses, they tend to refuse to acknowledge that they're losing, and they refuse to admit their predictions were wrong.
This can be seen in the decisions of many traders who, when they're losing, actually continue to hold their position, average down, use martingale strategies, implement hedging, and so on.
These decisions clearly don't make sense. In traditional trading, when a product doesn't generate profit, a merchant will stop "trading" that product. They wouldn't add more stock (averaging down) or even multiply their stock (martingale).
That's why in financial market trading, risk management is often prioritized. Because everyone is naturally very ready to accept profits. Meanwhile, no one is prepared to accept losses. Yet, in trading, everyone will go through cycles of profit and loss continuously.
已编辑 16 Mar 2025, 00:52
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