ODEONKAPITALS

A connected trading and portfolio workspace designed for clear, considered financial decisions.

Contact support

Platform

  • Explore platform
  • Markets and trading
  • Portfolio and reporting
  • Funding and withdrawals
  • Fees and costs

Markets

  • Market news
  • Learn
  • Account types
  • Staking and savings
  • Understanding risk

Company

  • About Odeon Kapitals
  • Our teams
  • Careers
  • Contact

Support

  • Help center
  • Contact support
  • Sign in
  • Open an account

Legal

  • Legal documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Risk Disclosure
  • Compliance Policy
  • Liquidity Advance Terms
Start your journey

Ready to trade?

Compare account tiers, review earn products, and enter the connected customer workspace.

Start tradingCompare account types

Your account. Your control.

Registered company

ODEON KAPITAL AG

UID CHE-348.764.474 · CH-ID CH-020.3.052.833-2
FCRO-ID 1579892

Registered address

c/o Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie France Suisse
Neumarkt 6, 8001 Zürich

Risk warning

Trading financial instruments and digital assets involves risk and may result in the loss of capital. Review the applicable product information and risk disclosures before making a decision.

© 2026 ODEON KAPITAL AG. All rights reserved.

PrivacyTermsRisk disclosureCompliance
Loading live markets
TradingView
ODEONKAPITALS
HomeAccount types
  1. Learn
  2. Trading Glossary
  3. Overtrading

Overtrading

Overtrading is trading more frequently, larger, or more reactively than a justified strategy and risk plan calls for over time.

Defined termReviewed 16 July 2026

Related terms

Day TradingLoss AversionTrading PlanFear and GreedAsset AllocationCapacity for Loss

Educational risk notice

This material is general education, not personal investment advice or a promise of results. Markets can move beyond planned levels, and losses can exceed expectations when leverage, liquidity, gaps, or operational failures are involved.

term specific risk
Read the full risk disclosure
Trading glossaryReviewed 16 July 2026

Definition

Overtrading is trading more frequently, larger, or more reactively than a justified strategy and risk plan calls for over time.

In market context

It can follow boredom, frustration, FOMO, attempts to recover a loss, or incentives that reward activity rather than outcomes. More trades increase exposure to spreads, fees, slippage, operational errors, and inconsistent decisions, even when gross results look active. Tracking turnover, reasons for entry, rule violations, and net performance can reveal the pattern and support enforceable limits or cooling-off periods before further trading.

Risk context

High turnover can produce a net loss through costs and poor execution even when many individual trades are profitable before expenses.

Source

Use the primary source for fuller regulatory or market context.

FINRA — Guarding Against Excessive Trading

Educational risk notice

This material is general education, not personal investment advice or a promise of results. Markets can move beyond planned levels, and losses can exceed expectations when leverage, liquidity, gaps, or operational failures are involved.

term specific risk
Read the full risk disclosure

Related glossary terms

Selected from explicit term relationships and shared tags.

beginner3 min

Day Trading

Day trading is a strategy of opening and closing positions within the same trading day to seek gains from short-term price movement.

strategy · psychologyRead guide
beginner3 min

Loss Aversion

Loss aversion is the tendency to experience losses more strongly than comparable gains, which can distort otherwise consistent financial decisions.

psychology · riskRead guide
beginner3 min

Trading Plan

A trading plan is a written decision framework defining eligible setups, risk limits, execution rules, review methods, and conditions for not trading.

strategy · psychologyRead guide
beginner3 min

Fear and Greed

Fear and greed are shorthand for emotional pressures that can push trading decisions away from a predefined evidence and risk process.

fear · greedRead guide