Managing your intraday trades when the market is open can be a very nerve-racking experience. Sometimes there's so much going on that it's hard to keep track of what's important. Other times it seems like you're watching paint dry and nothing is going on in, and you can feel your nervous energy building up in an urge to do something.
This sense of market condition affects your trading state of mind, as does the sum total of your emotional responses to the results of the trades that you have taken so far that day.
It is as if you have an emotional bank account that tracks the debit and credit of emotional responses to the results of the day. After a couple of losing trades in a row, it would be natural for you to start experiencing a little bit of anxiety with respect to the remaining positions at the open in order to gain back some of that positive feeling of momentum and profits.
If you can feel your emotional state varying as a consequence of the trade results for that day, then it is a good idea for you to reinforce your trading practice which gets you to the "zero state" quickly and easily as soon as you can sense your emotional state changing.
If you are an intraday trader who is relying upon tight stops catching key turning points in the market to create high reward to risk ratio trades, however, you must come to expect a series of losing trades in a row with minor losses in order to be positioned to catch the winning trade which buys them all back and then some when your trade takes off.
If you have unreasonable expectations about your winning rate, you may find yourself becoming depressed by a losing streak that should be considered normal, usual and expected.
Profitable ETF Trading Strategies - Manage Your Emotional Bank Account