That high leverage is dangerous is well-known to most people, but it  is not unusual to make spectacular profits with a highly leveraged  account, just as it is not unusual to throw three heads in a row during a  coin-tossing competition. The sad fact is that even those spectacular  profits are highly likely to be wiped out if the trader continues to  make bets utilizing high leverage, as we examined in the previous  articles on gambling strategies in forex. The inability of the trader to  get rid of high leverage after a bout of successful trades is related  to a concept called the “gambler’s conceit”. The gambler’s conceit is  not caused by high leverage only, but we will limit our discussion of  this subject to high leverage since it’s so common among traders.
Many of us have that genie beside our ears who whispers to us all the  time that risking too much is not a problem because we are wise enough  to exit a risky bet while still running profits. High leverage may be  wrong, undercapitalization may be dangerous, but our trades have so far  been profitable, and as soon as the profits diminish or losses are being  registered, we will close our positions, and exit the game, be it  gambling with cards or gambling with forex.
It's very convincing. After all, why would one want to risk losing  the profits of such a risky practice as high leverage? What is the point  of continuing to practice a losing strategy even after your profits  have been halved by a string of losses?
Many beginning traders who make a lot of money randomly in the forex  market in a short period of time are convinced that it is their method,  style, attitude that makes those large profits possible. On the other  hand, the experience and knowledge possessed by a trader at the start of  his career is insufficient for practicing self-control or employing  money management methods successfully. Thus, in many cases (but not  always), the doubling, or tripling of the account of a new trader is  just a chance event, regardless of the rationalizations which the trader  uses to explain his situation. What is more, even in the case of a  highly successful, highly disciplined trader, the occasional very large  profits are not at all a sign of increased efficiency or better  understanding: There’s nothing extraordinary about the occasional  extremes in a trader’s career. Instead of emphasizing them too much, and  thinking about what he did right or wrong to deserve such large profits  or losses, the seasoned trader will evaluate them for what they are:  statistical anomalies on which neither a career, nor a trading strategy  can be based.
The Gambler’s conceit prevents such a rational explanation. Instead  of understanding the gains after highly-leveraged bets as random  developments, the trader ties these results to his own exceptional luck,  skill, or insight in evaluating the market action, or to his superior  trading strategy, and convinces himself that he will be able to  terminate his trading activity due to his controlling power over his  trading results. With such false confidence, when the inevitable large  losses occur he will ponder on what went wrong with his trade, which  indicator, which scheme he needs to revise and refine, instead of  accepting and understanding that gains on highly leveraged bets are  illusory, and unlikely to remain with him permanently. When a peer  confronts him about the unusually high leverage of his trades, and his  irrational expectation that he can keep profiting with such high risks,  he will protest by mentioning his past successes.
In fact, gains on a highly leveraged account have the potential to be  even more destructive than losses. Losses will teach the trader to be  humble, and will lead him to revise his methods. Gains, on the other  hand, will addict him to his errors. Sadly, such an addiction can only  be broken by the pain of a totally wiped-out account sometimes.  Fortunately for you, we’re here to warn you about the dangers associated  with this risky practice.
The best remedy of the gambler’s conceit is avoidance of the  addiction entirely. Instead of consoling yourself that you will give up  the practice once the profits are gone, convince yourself to never begin  the unhealthy game. Do not aim at exceptional results; aim at  consistency. But if you find that you’re already deep into the game of  high leverage and risky practices, our advise to you is to cut it off  right now, without waiting for the losses to show up. Just close the  chapter, quit trading for a while, and a few weeks later, or maybe a  month, restart your career by practicing sane and sensible strategies  this time. Not only will you find intellectual satisfaction at having  overcome a dangerous addiction, you will also have a profitable path  before yourself as you improve your skills, recognize your errors.
To repeat, brief periods of enormous profits is never the purpose of a  successful trader. Such periods are always temporary, and the false  confidence that becomes instilled your psyche is often destructive to  your career as a trader: aim at consistent profits, do not aim at high  very high profits.
 
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