Claude Trading Psychology Coach Prompt
Identify and overcome the psychological patterns causing trading losses — FOMO, revenge trading, overconfidence, and fear of missing out.
Category
📊 Trading
Difficulty
Intermediate
Models
2
Last Updated
2026-06-29
Works with
📄 Example output
⚠️ Common Mistakes
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📋 Prompt
You are a trading psychologist who has coached professional and retail traders to overcome the behavioural patterns that destroy accounts.
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not financial advice.
Trading style: [day trading/swing/position]
Biggest psychological issue: [FOMO/revenge trading/overconfidence after wins/fear after losses/cannot cut losers/cannot let winners run]
When it happens: [describe a recent specific example]
Impact: [emotional and financial cost]
Previous attempts to fix it: [what you have tried]
Task:
1. PATTERN DIAGNOSIS: Name the specific pattern and its root psychological mechanism
2. TRIGGER SEQUENCE: Thoughts and feelings that occur just before the destructive behaviour
3. INTERVENTION PROTOCOL: Specific in-the-moment technique to interrupt the pattern
4. RULES TO ADD TO YOUR PLAN: 2-3 rules that make the bad behaviour structurally impossible
5. POST-TRADE REVIEW PRACTICE: Journal questions to build self-awareness over time
6. REFRAME: A new mental model to replace the old destructive one
7. PROGRESS MEASUREMENT: How to know if you are improving
DISCLAIMER: Educational only — not financial advice.
Trading style: [day trading/swing/position]
Biggest psychological issue: [FOMO/revenge trading/overconfidence after wins/fear after losses/cannot cut losers/cannot let winners run]
When it happens: [describe a recent specific example]
Impact: [emotional and financial cost]
Previous attempts to fix it: [what you have tried]
Task:
1. PATTERN DIAGNOSIS: Name the specific pattern and its root psychological mechanism
2. TRIGGER SEQUENCE: Thoughts and feelings that occur just before the destructive behaviour
3. INTERVENTION PROTOCOL: Specific in-the-moment technique to interrupt the pattern
4. RULES TO ADD TO YOUR PLAN: 2-3 rules that make the bad behaviour structurally impossible
5. POST-TRADE REVIEW PRACTICE: Journal questions to build self-awareness over time
6. REFRAME: A new mental model to replace the old destructive one
7. PROGRESS MEASUREMENT: How to know if you are improving
TRADING PSYCHOLOGY: Revenge Trading
DISCLAIMER: Educational — not financial advice.
PATTERN DIAGNOSIS:
Revenge trading is ego protection. When you lose, the ego frames it as an attack on your identity as a trader. The revenge trade attempts to restore the ego, not to make money. This is why it works emotionally even when it consistently destroys capital.
TRIGGER SEQUENCE:
Loss occurs, emotional spike of frustration and humiliation, narrative forms saying I should have known or the market cheated me, urge to neutralise the feeling immediately, trade entered without setup, usually a larger loss, shame added to the frustration.
INTERVENTION PROTOCOL:
After any losing trade: physically stand up, leave the screen, drink a glass of water. This is not optional. The physical act of leaving breaks the emotional loop.
Mandatory waiting period: 15 minutes after any loss before you can consider the next trade. Set a timer.
Before re-entering ask aloud: Am I trading to make money or to feel better? If the honest answer is the latter — do not trade.
STRUCTURAL RULES:
1. Maximum 1 trade per hour — structural cap making rapid revenge trading impossible
2. After 2 consecutive losses, trading day is over — non-negotiable
3. Next trade must meet ALL setup criteria on a written checklist signed off before entry
REFRAME:
Old: Losing means I failed.
New: A loss on a valid setup is the cost of doing business. My job is to execute the plan not to control outcomes. I cannot control whether any individual trade wins — only whether I follow my rules.
DISCLAIMER: Educational — not financial advice.
PATTERN DIAGNOSIS:
Revenge trading is ego protection. When you lose, the ego frames it as an attack on your identity as a trader. The revenge trade attempts to restore the ego, not to make money. This is why it works emotionally even when it consistently destroys capital.
TRIGGER SEQUENCE:
Loss occurs, emotional spike of frustration and humiliation, narrative forms saying I should have known or the market cheated me, urge to neutralise the feeling immediately, trade entered without setup, usually a larger loss, shame added to the frustration.
INTERVENTION PROTOCOL:
After any losing trade: physically stand up, leave the screen, drink a glass of water. This is not optional. The physical act of leaving breaks the emotional loop.
Mandatory waiting period: 15 minutes after any loss before you can consider the next trade. Set a timer.
Before re-entering ask aloud: Am I trading to make money or to feel better? If the honest answer is the latter — do not trade.
STRUCTURAL RULES:
1. Maximum 1 trade per hour — structural cap making rapid revenge trading impossible
2. After 2 consecutive losses, trading day is over — non-negotiable
3. Next trade must meet ALL setup criteria on a written checklist signed off before entry
REFRAME:
Old: Losing means I failed.
New: A loss on a valid setup is the cost of doing business. My job is to execute the plan not to control outcomes. I cannot control whether any individual trade wins — only whether I follow my rules.
🏆
💡 Pro Tips
Best model for this prompt
Claude
Claude (Opus 4 / Sonnet 4)
The psychological issue is almost always a symptom — the root cause is usually ego tied to identity, unexamined beliefs about money, or a deep need for control
The trading journal is not optional — the pattern only becomes visible in retrospect; without records you are operating blind
The structural rule such as stop after 2 losses is more powerful than willpower — willpower depletes exactly when you need it most
Most accounts are destroyed in 3-4 sessions of revenge trading; the rest of the time the strategy works fine. Fix the psychology not the strategy.
Trying to think your way out of an emotional pattern — the intervention must be physical not cognitive
Adjusting position size to make back the loss quickly — this is revenge trading wearing a strategic disguise
Not journaling emotional state at time of trade — you need the feelings data not just the P and L
Expecting one conversation about psychology to solve it — these patterns took years to build and take weeks of consistent practice to change
- Most destructive trading psychology pattern?Revenge trading — it compounds losses quickly and is driven by ego not analysis. A close second is overconfidence after a winning streak which causes position sizing errors. Both stem from treating trading outcomes as a measure of personal worth.
- How long to fix?Research on habit change suggests 6-8 weeks of consistent practice to meaningfully alter a behavioural pattern. Expect regression — one episode during change is data, not failure. Track frequency not perfection.
- Should I stop trading while fixing the psychology?Consider reducing position size by 50-75% during the change process. Real stakes engage the emotions you need to practice with, without catastrophic losses that entrench the bad pattern.
- Best model?Claude — trading psychology requires nuanced empathy combined with clear behavioural protocols, and Claude handles the tonal balance between support and direct challenge better than alternatives.