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Beginner Basics5 min read

3 Beginner Mistakes That Destroy Traders

These three mistakes account for the majority of beginner failures. Avoid them and you're already ahead of 90% of new traders.

Mistake 1: Trading Without a Stop Loss

This is the fastest way to blow an account. New traders often avoid stop losses because they "don't want to get stopped out." But a trade without a stop loss is a trade with unlimited risk.

Every professional trader uses stop losses. Every single one. The stop loss isn't your enemy — it's your insurance policy. It defines your maximum risk before you enter the trade.

If you can't accept the stop loss, you shouldn't take the trade. Period.

Mistake 2: Revenge Trading

You take a loss. It stings. So you immediately jump into another trade to "make it back." This is revenge trading, and it's one of the most destructive patterns in trading.

Revenge trades are emotional, not analytical. They're usually larger than normal (because you want to recover faster) and poorly planned (because you're not thinking clearly).

The fix: After a loss, step away. Review your journal. Come back when you're calm. The market will still be there tomorrow.

Mistake 3: No Trading Plan

Trading without a plan is gambling. A trading plan defines your entry criteria, exit criteria, position size, and risk management rules BEFORE you trade.

Without a plan, every decision is made in the moment — under pressure, with money on the line. That's a recipe for emotional decisions and inconsistent results.

Your trading plan doesn't need to be complicated. It needs to be clear, specific, and followed consistently.

Key Takeaways

  • 1Always use a stop loss — a trade without one has unlimited risk
  • 2Revenge trading compounds losses — step away after a loss
  • 3A trading plan removes emotional decision-making from your process
  • 4The market will always be there tomorrow — patience is a skill
  • 5Consistency in following your rules matters more than any single trade

Put This Into Practice

Use our free position size calculator to apply what you've learned.

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