13 min

Zia Islam – Don’t Let Emotions Cloud Your Investing Decisions My Worst Investment Ever Podcast

    • Investing

Mr. M. Zia Islam is the Coordinator, External Relations, School of Management, Asian Institute of Technology Thailand. AIT School of Management is ranked among top 250 B-Schools in the World under QS World Rankings by Subjects 2018 under "Business & Management." He holds a Bachelor of Science in Computing & Information Systems from London Metropolitan University. In his free time, he enjoys reading books with a cup of hot latte.  He lives with his wife in Bangkok for eight years now.
In today’s episode, Zia shares his social trading story, his loss and the lessons he learned from the experience. Know why it is important not to let emotions cloud your investment decision to avoid making irrational investment choices.
 
“The lessons I got are - you cannot be an emotional eater and go to the masters.  Learn something from the technical expert, then make decisions more logical and most practical.”
– M. Zia Islam
 
 
What do you want to hear from the My Worst Investment Ever Podcast?
Tell us here!
Resources: 
My Worst Investment Ever Book myworstinvestmentever.com
Topics Covered:
02:25 – Zia narrates how he was introduced to social trading and how it ended as his worst investment story
07:01 – The two things he learned from his social trading experience 
08:05 – Andrew shares his golden nuggets of wisdom in investing
11:07 – Zia’s final advice: “Go and find the masters.  Start to find a technical expert who can teach you first. Learn first before you go for action. That's why people lose money. But when you learn things, and then you lose, it makes sense.  Just don't go for any emotional investment and follow others without going the things what you're doing.”
 
Main Takeaways:
Lesson 1: “The investors worst enemy is not the stock market but the emotions.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 2: “It's the human nature to be emotional. You said human nature to be, but if it's an investment return, it cannot be an emotional investment.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 3: “The first thing I always tell people is don't invest with people who call you.”– Andrew Stotz
Lesson 4: “Every single trading strategy you ever do in your whole life is yours. You may be following somebody, but ultimately, it’s yours and your responsibility to put in the risk management systems and all of those things. You can't just follow because the problem about following is everybody will invite you in, very rarely will they tell you when to exit.”– Andrew Stotz
Lesson 5: “There are many people who are the beginner outside, their tracking biased and they think maybe it will bring huge income.  But you have to be more practical. Do your homework before you fell for it.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 6: “I would generally tell people to stay away from online trading platforms, particularly related to commodities and currencies.  One of the reasons is because in currencies, first of all, it's the most massive liquid market in the world and that means that the players that are in it are the biggest in the world and that's who you're trading against.”–...

Mr. M. Zia Islam is the Coordinator, External Relations, School of Management, Asian Institute of Technology Thailand. AIT School of Management is ranked among top 250 B-Schools in the World under QS World Rankings by Subjects 2018 under "Business & Management." He holds a Bachelor of Science in Computing & Information Systems from London Metropolitan University. In his free time, he enjoys reading books with a cup of hot latte.  He lives with his wife in Bangkok for eight years now.
In today’s episode, Zia shares his social trading story, his loss and the lessons he learned from the experience. Know why it is important not to let emotions cloud your investment decision to avoid making irrational investment choices.
 
“The lessons I got are - you cannot be an emotional eater and go to the masters.  Learn something from the technical expert, then make decisions more logical and most practical.”
– M. Zia Islam
 
 
What do you want to hear from the My Worst Investment Ever Podcast?
Tell us here!
Resources: 
My Worst Investment Ever Book myworstinvestmentever.com
Topics Covered:
02:25 – Zia narrates how he was introduced to social trading and how it ended as his worst investment story
07:01 – The two things he learned from his social trading experience 
08:05 – Andrew shares his golden nuggets of wisdom in investing
11:07 – Zia’s final advice: “Go and find the masters.  Start to find a technical expert who can teach you first. Learn first before you go for action. That's why people lose money. But when you learn things, and then you lose, it makes sense.  Just don't go for any emotional investment and follow others without going the things what you're doing.”
 
Main Takeaways:
Lesson 1: “The investors worst enemy is not the stock market but the emotions.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 2: “It's the human nature to be emotional. You said human nature to be, but if it's an investment return, it cannot be an emotional investment.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 3: “The first thing I always tell people is don't invest with people who call you.”– Andrew Stotz
Lesson 4: “Every single trading strategy you ever do in your whole life is yours. You may be following somebody, but ultimately, it’s yours and your responsibility to put in the risk management systems and all of those things. You can't just follow because the problem about following is everybody will invite you in, very rarely will they tell you when to exit.”– Andrew Stotz
Lesson 5: “There are many people who are the beginner outside, their tracking biased and they think maybe it will bring huge income.  But you have to be more practical. Do your homework before you fell for it.”– M. Zia Islam
Lesson 6: “I would generally tell people to stay away from online trading platforms, particularly related to commodities and currencies.  One of the reasons is because in currencies, first of all, it's the most massive liquid market in the world and that means that the players that are in it are the biggest in the world and that's who you're trading against.”–...

13 min