[Events] What’s your biggest trading weakness — and do you want to fix it?
If you’ve been trading for a while, you’ve probably noticed this:
Most people don’t lose money because they know nothing. They lose money because they keep making the same mistake over and over again.
Maybe you chase when a stock is running. Maybe you panic and sell too early. Maybe you’re good at taking profits, but terrible at cutting losses. Or maybe you make a plan before the market opens, then completely ignore it once things start moving.
So let’s talk about it: What’s your biggest trading weakness? And have you actually tried to fix it? Drop a comment and share yours. It can be a habit, a mindset issue, or a mistake you keep repeating in your trades.
How to join
Comment below and tell us:
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What’s your biggest trading weakness?
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Are you trying to improve it? If yes, how?
Event Dates
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March 20, 2026 – March 26, 2026
Prizes
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Everyone who comments here or posts under the topic gets 5 Tiger Coins.
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We’ll also pick 1 standout comment (most actionable / most relatable) for a bonus gift $Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$
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Everyone who comments here or posts under the topic gets 5 Tiger Coins.
Warren Buffett has a blunt warning for those of us caught in this psychological trap:
"Selling your winners and holding your losses is like cutting flowers and watering the weeds".
How do I plan to fix this trading weakness?
1. The "Hard Stop" Divorce: Setting a stop loss at entry. If the price hits the line, the relationship is over. There is no "we can work this out" talk.
2. The "Blank Slate Test": Ask the question - 'If I didn't own this weed today, would I buy it?". If not, it is time to cut it off.
3. The "Flower" Pivot : Moving my capital from the stagnant weeds into stocks where growth actually lives.
I am realising that in the volatile markets of 2026, it is important to stop watering the weeds & start feeding the flowers. I will be happier for it.
@TigerEvents @Tiger_comments
To improve, I’ve focused on process over outcome—predefining entries, exits, and risk before the trade. I also size positions smaller so I can stay disciplined, and I keep a simple journal to track when and why I deviate. Most of my mistakes still come down to the same triggers: FOMO and the fear of giving back profits.
What’s helped most is accepting that missing a trade is better than forcing one. I now wait for confirmation instead of chasing momentum, and I treat risk management as my real edge. It’s still a work in progress, but my execution is getting more consistent—and hopefully that earns me the bonus from $Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$ 🚀
@TigerEvents @TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub
Overtrading: Entering too many positions out of boredom or a desire for excitement, which increases transaction costs and emotional fatigue.
Ignoring Risk Management: Risking too much of the account on a single "sure thing" or failing to use stop-losses.
Hope Trading: Holding onto a losing position long after the original reason for the trade has vanished, "hoping" the market will turn back around.
Create a Pre-Trade Checklist: Use a physical or digital list that must be checked off before clicking "buy" or "sell". This forces the brain to switch from emotional to analytical mode.
Set Daily Loss Caps: Establish a hard limit (e.g., 2% of your account). Once hit, close the platform immediately for the rest of the day to prevent an emotional spiral.
Practice Mindfulness: Brief breathing exercises before a session can lower stress levels and help you "respond" to market moves rather than "react" impulsively.
Both comes down to mindset. In first case greed waiting for more profits. In case two it is not wanting to book losses.
I newly joined Tiger Broker, and it's the fist time had a great trading where I could read so many data of companies within the platform.
Up to the point, I bought Tiger broker share without thinking the theory anymore, I realised that bought at the highest peak. But I hold the share, because I trust Tiger broker price will go to a new time high.
How I’m improving:
1) Automated Entry Layers: Instead of one large entry, I now use "laddered" limit orders. This ensures I’m scaled into a position at a great average price without needing to "time" the absolute bottom perfectly.
2) Quantifying Conviction: I assign a numerical score (1-10) to every trade based on GAAP profitability and industry tailwinds. If it’s an 8+, execution is non-negotiable once it hits my price target.
The goal is to move from a "discloser" of ideas to a master of execution. Discipline is the only bridge between a good chart and a green P/L! 📈💎
Great article, would you like to share it?