THARP THINK CONCEPTS
Take The Mystery Out Of Trading
Internationally renowned Trading Coach, Van Tharp taught a set of ideas and principles that he called “Tharp Think.”
These concepts take the mystery out of trading by helping you understand who you are as a trader, how your personal psychology can work for you instead of against you, how to think about and manage risk, and how to develop winning trading systems.
Below is just the beginning of what each concept is about. Take a moment now to read each one to begin your understanding of successful trading the Van Tharp way.
Perfectionism, gambling, unnecessary losses, not being able to pull the trigger…
These are just some of the issues that traders contend within the markets every day. What motivates our decisions, and how can understanding what makes our own mind tick help us become better and more profitable traders?
Over the past 25 years, Van K. Tharp has modeled traders and the trading process, seeking answers to questions like, “why do some traders make fortunes while others lose their nest egg?” Dr. Tharp was a trading coach with a Ph.D. in psychology and an NLP modeler. To “model” effectively, you have to find out what behaviors and habits highly accomplished people have in common. Once you identify the common tasks that produce excellent behavior, you need to develop the beliefs, mental states, and strategies that allow you to perform those tasks.
“You do not trade the markets. You can only trade your beliefs about the markets.” —Van K. Tharp
What does it mean to say we only trade our beliefs about the markets? Let’s look at some statements and see what you believe about them:
The market is a dangerous place to invest. (You are right.)
The market is a safe place to invest. (You are right.)
Wall Street controls the markets and it’s hard for the little guy. (You are right.)
You can easily make money in the markets. (You are right.)
It’s hard to make money in the markets. (You are right.)
You need to have lots of information before you can trade profitably. (You are right.)
Do you see the theme? Your opinion about each one of these statements is correct, whatever it happens to be. There is no real right or wrong answer. Some people will have the same beliefs as you and others won’t, but that’s not important. What is important is that your beliefs about the markets will direct your thinking and your subsequent actions.
What is a Belief?
Beliefs are a primary way to filter information from the world. Beliefs are judgments, categorizations, meanings, or comparisons. They determine how we perceive reality and relationships in reality. What you expect (i.e. your reality) depends upon your beliefs and they are largely unconscious. Every sentence in this document represents one or two beliefs, including this one.
One of the beliefs that are most productive for good trading is the belief that you are totally responsible for your own results as a trader. When you adopt this belief, then you can learn from your mistakes. However, if you tend to blame someone else (your broker, your spouse, the person giving you tips) or even the market for the results that you get, then you will tend to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.
When traders “own their problems” and assume responsibility for the results produced, they then discover that their results come from some sort of mental state, which either allowed them to 1) follow their rules, 2) not follow their rules, or 3) trade without having any rules.
When traders take the time to write down all their beliefs (about themselves, the markets, money, etc.), then they can establish a much better idea of what they want to trade, how they want to trade and they can also see flaws in their thinking much easier. It is valuable to know which beliefs support you as a trader and which ones hinder your progress.
The Mindset of Trading
Once you have a clear understanding of which beliefs, mental states, and mental strategies are the core factors in top trading performance, you can then teach the same skills to others and have them perform well too. And when you can see this success duplicated in others, which we have been able to do in most aspects of trading, then you know you have a workable model.
The Key Mindsets of Top Traders are:
Personal Responsibility
Commitment
Their psychological “profile”
Working on personal issues (e.g., self-sabotage)
What is a Mental State?
Every task has an optimal mental state that will allow you to accomplish that task effortlessly. For example, to execute a trade you benefit from courage and total commitment. Fear, in contrast, is a big disadvantage as a mental state for executing trades.
Mental states are primarily what most people call discipline or emotional control. Examples include: being impatient with the markets, being afraid of the markets, or being too optimistic about the markets.
Controlling your mental states is just part of the answer, but when you can see that you are the creator of your own results as a trader, then you have come a long way and can really make progress.
What is Mental Strategy?
To understand mental strategies, you have to understand how people think. People think in their five sensory modalities, that is, in terms of visual images, sounds, feelings, taste, and smell.
A mental strategy is a step-by-step way in which you use these modalities; it is the specific sequence of your thinking. For example, the most effective strategy for the action step of executing a trade is to 1) see the signal; 2) recognize internally that this is the signal you decided you should take; 3) feel good about it, and 4) take action. If you do anything else, you probably won’t be able to take action or you will be very slow to act.
Trading fundamentals include the Top Tasks of Trading
The first four tasks have to do with preparing for your day.
Daily Self Analysis
Daily Mental Rehearsal
Focus and Intention
Developing a Low-Risk Idea
Traders need to be reminded of these tasks and to eliminate any self-sabotage that keeps them from following the tasks.
Van Tharp believed that everything revolves around your beliefs, mental states, and mental strategies, so with that in mind, everything about trading is 100% psychological, including why and how you trade or which system you will follow or build.
Many traders have a hard time “believing” this and it is almost the antithesis of what people learn in academic finance. So only you can decide whether it is worth the time to learn more about yourself and the psychological aspects of trading.
People get exactly what they want out of the markets. Most people are afraid of success or failure. As a result, they tend to resist change and continue to follow their natural biases and lose in the markets. When you get rid of the fear, you tend to get rid of the biases.—Van K. Tharp, Ph.D.