How Commitment Consistency Hijacks Rational Decision-Making
- 2026-01-22
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial
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Why are you reluctant to close your position no matter how big the loss is when you announce the direction publicly? Wmax Reveals the invisible psychological shackles in trading-commitment consistency bias. This article will take you through the self-defense mechanism behind "dead carrying" and teach you how to free yourself from the obsession of "proving you are right" and achieve rational account management by changing your presentation habits and review logic.
Don’t let other people’s “profit screenshots” disrupt your rhythm: How social comparison misleads trading judgment
- 2026-01-22
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial

Don't let other people's profit screenshots disrupt your trading rhythm. Wmax takes you through the "survivor bias" behind social media and reveals how social comparison induces you to go into the high-risk abyss. This article will teach you how to block external noise, establish a self-centered evaluation system, and return to the rational track of independent decision-making.
When “Too Many Choices” Paralyze You: How Choice Overload Paralyzes Trading Decisions
- 2026-01-20
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial

The more options, the greater the chance of winning? Wmax Reveals the "choice overload" trap in trading: Too many indicators and varieties are quietly draining your decision-making energy. This article will teach you how to use "decision scaffolding" to filter out interference, transform freedom into orderly rules, and help you make more decisive decisions in the ever-changing market.
When profits and losses are given emotional meaning
- 2026-01-15
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial

Wmax analyzes transaction attribution deviations, helps users identify self-interested attributions, optimize review and strategy iteration, and achieve rational and objective CFD transactions.
The Illusion of Control: When traders overestimate their influence on the market
- 2026-01-15
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial

Wmax analyzes the psychological bias of illusion of control in trading, reveals the impact of blind intervention and overconfidence on risk management, and provides rational response strategies.
The Sunk Cost Trap: Why It’s So Hard to Let Go of Losing Positions
- 2026-01-15
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Featured solutions

Wmax Behavioral finance analyzes how the sunk cost fallacy affects position holding and stop loss decisions, reveals the psychological trap of floating losses, and provides rational trading methods to overcome emotional interference.
Why do you always want to "get your money back"? Be careful of this emotional trap
- 2026-01-14
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Featured solutions

Wmax Behavioral Finance analyzes how the obsession with recouping distorts trading judgment, reveals the emotional trap after losses, and provides practical methods to break out of the impulsive trading cycle.
Several facts you may overlook about stop loss orders
- 2026-01-13
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Featured solutions

Wmax analyzes the execution mechanism of stop-loss orders in the real market, explains the impact of gaps and liquidity on transaction prices, and provides practical strategies and risk management methods for setting stop-losses.
Commitment Consistency Bias: Why it’s so hard for us to “admit our mistakes and close our positions”
- 2026-01-13
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Featured solutions

Stop-loss rejection often stems from commitment consistency bias. Wmax Behavioral Finance Series provides an in-depth analysis of why publicly expressing opinions, keeping a long-term eye on the market, or adding positions will make people fall into the psychological trap of holding on to losses. Learn how to decouple trading decisions from your own identity, develop the professional quality to dare to overturn yourself, and maintain the courage to correct logic in an uncertain market.
Outcome bias: good results may not come from good decisions
- 2026-01-12
- Posted by: Wmax
- Category: Tutorial

Be wary of outcome bias in trading. Wmax Behavioral Finance Series provides an in-depth analysis of why making money does not mean making the right decision. Learn how to distinguish process quality from random luck, and establish a process-oriented review mechanism through ex-ante logs and counterfactual questioning to help you maintain rational decision-making in a financial market full of randomness.
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