Most overtraders do not know they are overtrading. They think they are being active, diligent, finding opportunities. Here are 10 signs that reveal the truth.
Start Free Trial →You do not know how many trades you will take today. You trade until the market closes or until you run out of capital or motivation. Professional traders have a hard daily trade limit.
You enter trades not because there is a valid setup but because you are bored sitting in cash. The market being slow feels like a problem rather than an opportunity to wait.
Your brokerage, STT, and transaction charges exceed what your edge generates. You are essentially donating to your broker. Calculate your total transaction cost per month.
When you lose, you increase position size to recover faster. This is both overtrading and revenge trading — a particularly destructive combination.
At the end of the day you cannot recall all the trades you took. If you took so many trades that you cannot remember them, you took too many trades.
Your highest-conviction trades from the morning are your smallest positions. Your impulsive afternoon trades are your largest. This inverted sizing is a classic overtrading pattern.
Your backtested strategy has positive expectancy but your actual results are negative. The gap between strategy P&L and actual P&L is almost entirely explained by overtrading.
Being in cash feels uncomfortable. You feel the need to always have an open position. This anxiety-driven behavior leads to entries at any price just to be "in the market."
On losing days you take more trades, not fewer. The impulse to recover drives you to increase trading frequency — the opposite of what rational risk management requires.
Your genuinely high-quality setups often appear when you are already over-committed — fully deployed in lower-quality earlier trades. Capital and attention are both finite resources.