Humans remember the tasks they *didn’t* finish longer than the ones they did. Use that.” — Bluma Zeigarnik (paraphrased)
Henrik Ekenberg
hekenberg@iris.to
npub1uh0f...ehtg
Trader // Small cap investor Sweden
A pivot point isn’t arbitrary — it marks a zone of equilibrium,
where supply and demand are nearly in balance.
When demand overwhelms supply,
that balance tips — and price breaks out with force.
It’s not guesswork. It’s structure.
The market doesn’t care how confident you are — only how prepared you are
What often destroys weeks or months of progress isn’t a broken system —
It’s the impulse to chase quick profits in an unstructured, emotional way.
One rushed trade…
One moment of overconfidence…
And all your hard-earned gains can vanish.
🎯 Discipline keeps what skill builds.
Ready to read some books ?


Success in trading doesn’t come from excitement—it comes from execution
Update from 27 Apr 2025
📈 NVDA is following a similar pattern to what CSCO built during its peak years.
History doesn’t repeat exactly — but it often leaves clues.
If the pattern holds, it’s a signal to stay alert.


As I’ve often said — never lose sight of this simple truth:
If you succeed in trading, it won’t be because you’re a "good trader."
It will be because you’ve survived.
Because you’ve been a good risk manager.
And a truly good risk manager always plans for the day when their edge might disappear.
They stay humble, stay alert, and stay ready to adapt.
Survival is the foundation of success — not skill alone.
If a trader is successful, it’s not simply because they are "good."
It’s because they are quick to take small losses — and patient to let profits grow.
📉 They cut what's not working without hesitation.
📈 They give their winners time to blossom.
Success in trading is less about brilliance and more about disciplined execution.
🚫 Don’t let winning trades inflate your ego.
🚫 Don’t let losing trades crush your spirit.
🎯 The goal is to stay neutral — clear, focused, and consistent.
Emotional swings distort decision-making.
Keep a level head. That’s your real edge.



Happy Easter from Tjörn


The last thing I want to do in my trading is chase "optimized" variables.
Over-optimizing looks smart on paper — but it’s one of the fastest ways to end up in the poorhouse.
📉 Markets change. Conditions shift.
What works perfectly in a backtest often breaks spectacularly in real time.
Real trading rewards robustness and adaptability, not perfection.
If you're an intellectual who struggles to admit being wrong, trading will humble you — quickly.
Markets have a relentless way of proving even the smartest people wrong.
Intellectuals often battle with:
❌ Not knowing the answer
❌ Not being in control
❌ Being publicly and repeatedly wrong
But if you’re willing to do the work, trading offers unlimited possibilities.
Today, trading is more egalitarian than ever:
No barriers to entry
No institutional edge that private traders can't match
No monopoly on foolishness — or on success
Institutional traders can be just as lost as private traders.
Private traders can outperform some of the biggest names in the industry.
Today, the playing field is truly level.
If you’re patient, open-minded, and committed to mastering the universal principles of trading,
the transformation is in your hands.
But it’s all on you.
Own your actions — and you will own your results.
Comparing CSCO and NVDA price action week by week offers valuable clues about NVDA’s possible future.
History doesn’t repeat exactly — but it often rhymes.
Tracking patterns from past market leaders can help spot early warnings or confirmation signals.
Stay objective. Let the charts guide you.


Trading isn’t about being certain — it’s about stacking probabilities in your favor
Important to remember that
Which steps are you following right now?
✅ Are you following your plan?
In fast-moving world, process matters more than predictions.
What’s your next step?
View article →
Text:
