Understanding Value in Trading: Why “Cheap” and “Expensive” Don’t Matter
When most people start trading, they bring the same mindset they use in everyday life: buy cheap and sell expensive.
It sounds logical. After all, that’s how we’re taught to shop, invest, and manage money.
But in financial markets, this mindset can actually become one of the most dangerous traps for traders.
At Find Your Edge, we focus on helping traders understand the deeper psychology behind the markets. One of the biggest shifts a trader must make is learning how to look at value, price, and trend differently.
In this article, we’ll explore why prices that seem “too high” can continue rising, why “cheap” prices can keep falling, and how traders can change their mindset to trade more effectively.
Why “Buy Low, Sell High” Can Mislead Traders
Throughout life, we’re trained to look for bargains.
We wait for sales.
We compare prices.
We try to buy things at the lowest possible cost.
But markets don’t move based on what we think is cheap or expensive.
They move based on supply, demand, momentum, and sentiment.
Let’s look at a simple example.
Imagine two apples.
- One apple costs $5
- The other apple costs $50
Most people would immediately say the $50 apple is expensive.
But what if the price continues rising and reaches $120 over the next few weeks?
Suddenly, that $50 price doesn’t look expensive anymore. It actually looks like a missed opportunity.
This is exactly how markets behave during strong trends.
Prices that look high can continue going higher for far longer than most traders expect.
Why Cheap Prices Can Keep Falling
The opposite is also true.
Let’s say a stock is trading at $5 per share.
Many traders assume this is cheap and that the price must eventually go up.
But if the market trend is bearish, that same stock could continue falling to $3… $2… or even $1.
Now the original $5 price doesn’t look cheap at all.
The Most Important Concept in Trading: Trend
One of the most well-known phrases in trading is:
“The trend is your friend.”
Yet many traders constantly fight the trend.
For example:
- When markets are rising, traders try to sell because price feels too high.
- When markets are falling, traders try to buy because price feels cheap.
But strong trends often continue much longer than people expect.
Instead of fighting the market, experienced traders ask a different question:
What direction is the market moving right now?
Understanding the trend allows traders to position themselves with the market instead of against it.
The Role of Ego in Trading
Another major challenge traders face is ego.
In everyday life, being right feels good.
But in trading, trying to prove you’re right can destroy your account.
Here’s a common scenario:
- A trader believes the market will fall.
- They take a short position.
- The market continues rising and stops them out.
Instead of accepting the loss, the trader enters another short position to prove their idea was correct.
This cycle repeats until the account suffers significant damage.
The truth is simple:
The market doesn’t care about our opinions.
Professional traders understand that losses are part of the process. Their goal isn’t to be right every time — it’s to align with the direction of the market and manage risk properly.
How Professional Traders Think About Value
For professional traders, value isn’t about cheap or expensive prices.
Value comes from opportunity within the trend.
They focus on:
- Market momentum
- Price structure
- Trend direction
- Risk management
- Probability
Instead of asking “Is this price too high?” they ask:
- Is the market trending?
- Is momentum increasing?
- Is there an opportunity to participate in the move?
This shift in thinking is one of the biggest steps traders take when moving from beginner to professional mindset.
Changing Your Perspective as a Trader
The next time you look at a chart, pause for a moment and ask yourself:
Are you trying to prove the market wrong?
Or are you trying to understand what the market is telling you?
Because successful trading isn’t about predicting every move.
It’s about observing price behavior and adapting to what the market is doing.
Sometimes the best decision isn’t to fight the market — it’s simply to move with it.
Final Thoughts
Understanding value in trading requires a complete shift in mindset.
Prices that appear expensive can keep rising.
Prices that appear cheap can keep falling.
The key is not judging price based on personal opinion, but learning to read market structure, momentum, and trend.
When traders stop focusing on being right and start focusing on following the market, their perspective — and often their results — begin to change.
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