What is Trading Psychology?
Trading psychology studies how fear, greed, and bias affect decisions despite known rules.
Indian market context (NSE)
Reference levels: Nifty 50 at 24,300, Reliance Industries at ₹1,300, Bank Nifty futures at 55,000 (lot size 30). Examples below show how Trading Psychology shows up on Indian index, equity, and futures books — update to live quotes in your journal.
Nifty 50 perspective
Trading Psychology often appears after Nifty moves 150+ points from open while you waited — journal “Nifty FOMO” entries separately from A-grade setups at 24,300 levels.
Reliance Industries perspective
Trading Psychology on Reliance trades is common around results noise at ₹1,300 — rate discipline 1–5 in TradeLyser even when P&L is green.
Bank Nifty futures perspective
Trading Psychology after Bank Nifty whipsaws 200 points around 55,000 triggers revenge sizing — enforce max daily loss before re-entering MIS.
How to validate
- Validate Trading Psychology tags against time-stamps — impulse entries cluster after losses.
- Compare P&L on tagged vs untagged sessions over 20+ trading days.
- Use mentor review to confirm tag definitions stayed consistent.
- Do not validate solely on one exceptional week of discipline.
How to track in TradeLyser
- Add psychology grade and Trading Psychology-related tag on each trade card.
- Use daily journal mood line when Trading Psychology risk is elevated.
- Dashboard: count psychology violations per week alongside P&L.
- Share tag definitions with mentor before monthly review.
Best practices
- Separate process score from P&L when reviewing Trading Psychology.
- Use cooldown timers after rule breaches involving Trading Psychology.
- Sleep on size increases — never add risk the same day as a Trading Psychology violation.
- Celebrate disciplined losses that followed the plan.
Common pitfalls
- Labelling trades after the fact to match desired self-image.
- Increasing size to fix a Trading Psychology episode immediately.
- Confusing a green day with cured Trading Psychology behaviour.
- Skipping tags on “small” impulsive trades.
How to use this in TradeLyser
Use psychology grades on trades; monthly review top three violation patterns.
Related terms
Fear of missing out is the anxiety that drives late entries into extended moves — often after the planned trigger passed.
Revenge trading is increasing size, frequency, or randomness immediately after a loss to “get back” at the market — usually breaking the playbook.
Discipline is repeatable adherence to entries, exits, size, and pause rules — especially after wins and losses.
Mindset covers beliefs about losses, discipline, and learning — the operating system behind rule execution.
FAQ
Therapy vs journaling?
Journal quantifies patterns; professional help for persistent distress.
Psychology only on losing days?
Win-day overconfidence is equally important to log.
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