Problem
You lose money on a trade. Your chest tightens, anger rises: “I’ll get it back now!”
You double your position size, ignore your rules, and force a trade.
A few hours later, your account is down even more.
This is revenge trading – trading from anger, not logic.
Cause of the Problem
- Ego defense: Losses feel like a personal attack.
- Need for control: Trying to “fix” the market by forcing a win.
- Financial pressure: Believing you can “recover” instantly by increasing size.
How the Brain Works
- Losses trigger the same brain areas as physical pain.
- The fight-or-flight response kicks in, creating a survival instinct to strike back.
- The dopamine system tempts you: recovering quickly would feel euphoric, so your brain pushes you to risk more.
Real-Life Example
Jonas loses €150 on EUR/USD. Furious, he thinks: “The market can’t beat me!” He doubles his lot size and enters again without analysis. The market goes the other way – another €300 gone.
Now his account is down €450 – not because of strategy, but because of emotions.
Practical Solutions
- The 2-Loss Rule
- After two consecutive losses, stop trading for the day.
- This creates a hard boundary against emotional spirals.
- Emotional Reset Routine
- After a loss, step away from the screen: walk, stretch, breathe.
- Never enter the next trade within 15 minutes.
- Detach Ego From Results
- Write down: “A loss is feedback, not an attack.”
- Review journal: Was it a good trade that lost, or a bad trade?
- Predefine Daily Loss Limit
- Example: Max -2% per day.
- If reached → platform closed. No exceptions.
✅ Key Takeaway: Revenge trading turns small losses into disasters. The strongest traders are not the ones who win the fastest – but the ones who know when to stop.