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DISCLAIMER: All of Tom's trades, strategies, and news coverage are based on his own opinions alone and are only done for entertainment purposes. If you are watching Toms videos, please Don't take any of this content as guidance for buying or selling any type of investment or security. Tom Nash is not a financial advisor and anything said on this YouTube channel should not be seen as financial advice. Tom is merely sharing his own personal opinion. Your own results in the stock market or with any type of investment may not be typical and may vary from person to person. Please keep in mind that there are a lot of risks associated with investing in the stock market so do your own research and due diligence before making any investment decisions.

So, a few years ago there was a study that was done on two groups of kids. They were giving a task, i think it was puzzles or something and nobody actually checked how well they did on the puzzles and they all got a score. They all got. Eight pluses, everybody was happy kumbaya amazing.

Now they split the group into two groups. One group was told that essentially they did really well because they work hard and the other group were told essentially that they have what is called like the smart gene they're. So smart, they just did it because they were insanely. Smart well done.

So what happened next? Is they presented these two groups with a much harder task, so the kids that were told they sold it so nicely because they were so smart, failed and felt miserably on the much harder task and got discouraged and sad and didn't even enjoy it. Now the same kids that were told that they work hard and that's why they got a plus in the previous assignment killed it, and the reason is because we all, as human beings have this thing called the internal versus external locus. Essentially, if some bad happens to you, do you say it's on you or something bad just happened yesterday i tweeted about talenteer and i put it with essentially saying: hey. The stock is up four percent wow.

Now i'm only down like a couple hundred thousand dollars and i laughed it off with a laugh emoji now that tweet was genuine and honest and i'm not a rich guy, i mean i don't have chamath money or elon money for me. Losing a couple hundred thousand is painful, so obviously i'm not able to answer thousands of people, but i can make a video explaining. How can you remain so focused and calm and basically laugh it off, even though it's a huge loss every single day, you have a set of difficulties and challenges, and if you say well, you know the big players are manipulating the market or whatever, like the markets, Are irrational and stuff like this or if you sit down and say well, i didn't research hard enough. I didn't apply the right set of characteristics to the stock.

It's on me made. A bad decision should have been smarter about. This should have been more patient should have maybe set longer outside or basically not materialized, a thousand different things that you could have done better. If you do this, just the psychological impact of reinforcing that internal locus of control is really really important for your future and i'll explain why? Because understanding this internal versus external is really nice, but this is auditory.

Learning humans, don't learn habits from auditory learning. They learn habits. By doing i always sit down after a bad decision, and i try to figure out what i did wrong. What's my fault as a parent, one thing i can tell you is that having rules is really important, but it's useless zero use.

If you don't enforce these rules religiously, they completely lose their meaning, if you don't enforce them and it's the same thing in this theory. If you don't enforce these rules, i'm about to teach you you'll never get that internal locus and control, and that's why every single loss is going to freak you out, you're, not going to be able to say, focus and center, like i stay with palantir, for example, Or other stock, you will be hard as a rock as an old russian refrigerator. Nothing will move you. If you learn these simple five rules, i'm about to teach you rule number one is basically avoiding the casino mentality.
You lost some money, you're trying to win it back. It's not your money anymore, it's completely virtual uh or i'm winning i'm on a hot streak. I don't want to get out it's going to go to the moon, right, the hot streak, mentality or essentially holding on to money. You don't have any more as if you have some sort of a psychological property claim to some money that you lost, and now you have to win it back.

So these sort of casino tricks that are designed to keep people playing until they eventually lose apply in the same manner in the stock market. You can't think of virtual money as if it's yours, if you lost it, it's gone and there's no point in thinking about it and keeping some score of a score tab in your head, some scorebox of how much money already lost and how much you need to Win, you have your account and, what's in it is in it, that's it don't make this mistake because you're going to chase these virtual losses or gains and you're going to basically, you know, drive your portfolio to the ground. The other thing is really important is what i call the 24 hour rule there's a 24 hour cool off for me for any single position. I want to open or close if i made a decision that i want to close or open the position.

I wait for 24 hours now i've been known to make mistakes with this rule and every single time i can guarantee you every single time. I didn't listen to this rule and i basically made an impulsive decision. I lost one of the most famous ones. Is the tesla trade which i sold a whole bunch of tesla stock just minutes before the close of trading? And then you know it was on the eve of the announcement of the split cost me a lot of money.

I was just angry and impatient and you know volatile and let emotions basically drive into this bad trade. So rule number three is probabilities. Now people keep asking well tom this company, it might go big if it does this and this and this i'm not going to give you names, but there's a lot of plays where there's a story involved and the question you want to ask yourself: well: is this Probable, or is this possible because there's a lot of possible things i mean my grandpa can basically attach wheels to his legs and become a bicycle that is possible, but i would not say that is probable. You got to look for the probable trades, not the possible trades, and in this case less is more now you look at social media and you look at all these guys that are trading and are putting out 15 different trade ideas per day, and you think that That's how you need to basically run your trading or investing, there's no need for that.
Less is more! You don't need to be making 15 trades a day. You don't even have to make one a day, there's days that go by, i don't even buy or sell a single stock, there's nothing wrong with being patient you're like lying in the bush. You have to wait your chance, so you don't need to own 50 stocks. You probably have a portfolio of 5 to 15 stock max and there's no need to the basically to devalue the the essence of portfolio by adding numerous positions and completely diversifying yourself to death, because you keep reading all these.

You know social media artists, i'm not gon na, say what they are because, because you know i'm just gon na call them artists now. The second thing is research correctly and when i say research correctly is a lot of people tend to research into their bias. Essentially, they look for confirmation bias. So if people like tesla or palantir they'll watch my videos and that's fine, but if you truly want to research a company, you have to be open to attacking your position.

You have to play devil's advocate. You have to research against yourself, so if you have this company, you absolutely gag about your high conviction stock, you have to watch and listen to people who hate it and basically understand the rationale, because you have to try and put holes in this armor in order For for you to find out whether this is indeed a good stock, or just a lot of confirmation bias, it's really critical that you do that, and the last rule i would just say, accountability. It's always on you. It's never the irrationality of the market.

It's always on you. Let me give an example: if you're an employee for a company - and you manage your portfolio for clients and all of a sudden, you lost a whole bunch of money for your clients. Would your employer get this explanation from you and you basically saying well sorry boss, the markets are just irrational or will you get fired? I mean most likely you will get fired because nobody cares if it's an external reason or something it's always on you. So once you accept that accountability - and you basically say well up - i made a mistake - then it's much easier to handle than just to keep blaming external factors, and that brings us back to the internal locus of control practice.

Your internal locus of control every single day on everything you do. You know you late to a meeting. You can't fall asleep a million different things you handle in the middle of your day find a solution that makes it better and then understand how you did it to yourself how you improved your situation. For example, i was fat for a long time took care of it.

You know, dropped a lot of weight. It didn't just happen because god decided. I want to be thinner, it's not about my genetics. No, in fact, i think i went against my genetics.
I mean i'm not genetically thin, but i did the work got the results and it's on me the same thing for the law side every day you have to practice this internal locus of control. If you want to be poised - and you want to be - you know kind of like me being able to joke about a big loss in your portfolio. Now that i'm saying that big losses are good, but i mean i made a whole video sharing. Every single lost position - i have i'm gon na - put it right here, it's not something that i'm proud of, but i'm completely open about it.

So it's right here go watch it and if you haven't yet and since we're coming up on christmas - and this is actually an impromptu video for the community - there's a subscribe button right here might want to subscribe. For christmas, see you tomorrow.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

36 thoughts on “Why i never flinch when things get tough easier than you think”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jax M says:

    great vid needed this for a tough hold that I have been going through but tested my thesis multiple times

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars David R says:

    I agree. This is a healthy attitude.

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tan Siew Choon says:

    Always devil advocate inside us …. yes

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars L May says:

    The 24-hour rule has served me well over the years and not just on stocks.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dorian Zlatan says:

    Russian refrigerator is the most unmoveable thing in the universe πŸ˜‚

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Coupon says:

    PLTR is still a value stock that you can make money on covered calls.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars kevman0111 says:

    Never flinches because he's got that Russian Tuxedo.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Johnny B says:

    There is something about a sleep cycle that helps to provide a more rational perspective of any given situation.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gil Adamowski says:

    Congrats on weight loss. I have been working on staying fit for years. Now 51. Really best thing I did. Plus buying Tesla and listening to you. Thanks for videos

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars john ramsey says:

    Im using this time to pay my mortgage. Just not watching my account..

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Plant4Table says:

    300 shares of TSLA is 300 shares of TSLA, regardless of the price.

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars J Starz70 says:

    The art of doing nothing is the hardest one to learn.

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Imtiaz Khan says:

    I watch Gordon Johnson videos when I have doubts about Tesla πŸ™‚

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mike M says:

    There is a personality test where you sit a kid at a table and put a marshmallow in front of them and tell them if they wait 5 mins they can have two. It is supposed to be an attribute that carries throughout peoples lives…..

    Im with the kid that ate the marshmallow before they had time to explain the rules…….dont give me a pack of marshmallows if you want any back…… whats with toasting marshmallows anyway.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rob Baker says:

    I wish I only lost 200k in TSLA this month. Still hodling TSLA for 10 more years. Still happy w my past, current and hopefully future returns.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lore says:

    I'm down about $6,000 which is about 25% down in my overall portfolio. It's depressing, and I don't really know how to boost my confidence because of this.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hola! TR 2002 says:

    It is because you are Russian bro. Russians never flinch because…well i mean fucking Russia is rough!

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars yagenta13 says:

    That 24 hours rule is LEGIT in both trading and life, especially marriage, children etc. Learn it the easy way, by taking the advice, or the hard way (like I did) through painful decisions.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Felicia Wichrowski says:

    The only 2 days that matter when it comes to stock price…The day you Buy and the day you SELL. If dividends come then you hit the jackpot. This especially applies to high growth companies like $TSLA and $PLTR. Remenber kids, the stock market is the movement of $ from the patient from the impatient.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sam Dean says:

    I preferred your old man farmer story. Can you tell it again??

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sandi Vade says:

    I am down 65k on pltr. Little nervous .

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Samuel Williams says:

    Loving the PLTR drop. Buying more. Holding for 5 to 10 years.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars MTB Thrill Seeker says:

    Tom I watch every video of yours, and you saved my butt on NIO. As a guy with a Masters degree in social psychology, I found this video very thought provoking. You are very right indeed. I have been in the market only 1 year and have made some mistakes, fortunately only small ones. However I reflect on them and move on trying to do better next time. It is just recently when I realized psychology has a place in the market and since I deployed that factor in my strategies, I have been doing much better. I am still in the green today after this last correction even. The internal /external locust of control factor I have not really put much thought into. As men we tend to externalize more normally anyway so we need to be aware of that fact and take precautions against it. Again brother you never stop amazing me, I love you man and would love to have a few beers with you someday. You seem like a guy I would enjoy hanging out with. The next time your in Michigan let me know maybe it can happen. Go Blue!

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Robyn Latchman RIBO says:

    Thank you very much for your truthful video!!

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tony sales says:

    very important being focused, not on this or that but on your own being, your own cognition , then ask yourself the question, do i perceive things correctly.
    test it, find out, that is easy to do. if you need to change then change, improve yourself at a pace that suits you. but above all else…improve.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Cameron kupka says:

    bro what is the deal with this amc BS yesterday?

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Me Who else says:

    Most americans are not "genetically" thin either! Lol

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Alexey Alexeenka says:

    Tom, you look awesome, could you make another video how you achieve it?

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Me Who else says:

    Most americans are not "genetically" thin either! Lol

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Faro Ke says:

    I appreciate your moral compass, I wish you will become one day a billionaire… you deserve it.

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Investing says:

    Tom's Russian Ramblings madman rules. #1. your account balance is your account balance. What you gained or lost is behind you. Today, you have what you have. #2. 24 hour rule on entering or exiting a holding. Think on it before you get out of Tesla too early. #3 statistically 5-15 stocks to have diversity, but don't diversify to death. #4 research as devils advocate and question your position, NOT to get confirmation bias. #5 its always on you. Not the market, not some crazy russian ramblings on youtube. Own your decisions. Its on you.

    Sounds like a guy wondering hard about what went wrong with PLTR. Now Crazy Cathie is selling the Russian madman's favorite stock. The pltr youtube channel is putting out some very nkla looking pointless videos with comments blocked. Wonder whats happening with PLTR?

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ouis Sandy says:

    I'm ok with losing because I planned for a loss or else I don't invest

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Derek Jay says:

    AMC and GME to the moon! We'll see what happens. My GME is down but it's all unrealized loss. Not leaving. No margin calls for me with cash account.

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Wings Of Silver says:

    Was the PLTR loss from your gains or your original investment?? Hope the former!!

  35. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Falcon says:

    Tom. Did I miss something? You say "loss" but that only takes place when you sell. Down is down not a loss.. Palantier is a major future powerful company.. I hope you didn't close it.. your emotions will be worse when it goes back and then to 70 80 90 and so on

  36. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Corn Pop says:

    Palantir is not a good deal, its hyped 50% what it should be based on today's numbers. If you buy above $12, you are buying for what the 2030 price will be. I am buying, mostly through CSP, and some direct buys as well. Im not fooling myself either. It's a hype play that short term (18 months) is just as likely to go to $40 as it is $10.

    I have 5 $18 12/31 CSP, i was paid about 80Β’ a share for that contract. If I get assigned, 500 shares for $17.25ish. If not, ill just be 20 shares with the premium I made. No hurry.

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