Imagine you're a casino. A casino doesn’t let emotions guide its actions — it doesn’t gamble, it plays the odds.
You want to have an edge, just like the casino. That means having full control over your probabilities, knowing exactly when to accept a trade (take a bet) and when to stand aside.
But if you keep jumping between systems, how will you ever know if you actually have an edge?
🔁 Without consistency, there’s no control. Without control, there’s no strategy.
Do you want to act like the gambler or like the casino? The choice is yours.
Henrik Ekenberg
hekenberg@iris.to
npub1uh0f...ehtg
Trader // Small cap investor Sweden
On this day, June 6th, as Sweden celebrates its National Day, I give warm congratulations to all Swedes!
It is a fitting occasion to reflect on a cherished symbol of national identity: the Swedish national anthem, "Du gamla, Du fria" (Thou ancient, Thou free).
The anthem's origins date back to 1844, with lyrics penned by the folklorist and antiquarian Richard Dybeck. The melody is a traditional folk tune from the province of Västmanland, which Dybeck adapted to his patriotic text. Interestingly, "Du gamla, Du fria" has never been officially adopted as the national anthem by the Swedish parliament. Its status has been cemented through tradition and popular acclaim, a testament to its enduring place in the hearts of the Swedish people.
The lyrics of "Du gamla, Du fria" are a poetic tribute to Sweden's natural beauty and storied past. The opening lines, "Thou ancient, Thou free, Thou mountainous North," evoke a sense of timelessness and liberty. The song continues to praise the nation's quiet beauty, its sun, sky, and green meadows. It speaks of a nation "enthroned on memories of great olden days," a nod to Sweden's significant history. The anthem's focus on the broader "Norden" (the North) reflects the pan-Scandinavian sentiments of the era in which it was written.
While not officially legislated, "Du gamla, Du fria" is performed at all official state ceremonies, sporting events, and national celebrations. It is a powerful and unifying song that resonates with Swedes both at home and abroad.
Happy National Day to all Swedes! Grattis på nationaldagen!
Why do brilliant people often fail at trading?
A close friend of mine—a highly successful professional—struggled badly in the markets.
Not because he lacked intelligence, but because he tried to outsmart the market.
He wasn’t really chasing profits—he was chasing validation. He wanted to prove he could see value others had missed.
But trading doesn’t reward ego. It rewards adaptability.
📉 The lesson?
The market doesn’t care how smart you are—it only cares how well you listen.
This document emphasizes the crucial role of risk management in trading, starting with a disciplined exit strategy rather than focusing solely on entry points. It highlights that stop losses are not a sign of failure but a vital tool for controlling potential losses and preserving capital for future opportunities. The text also discusses a strategic re-entry approach, advising traders to only re-enter a market if it shows renewed strength after being stopped out. Ultimately, the core message is that surviving and remaining in the market through effective risk control is more important than winning every single trade, thereby protecting both capital and trading psychology.
In today’s meeting, I’ll be showcasing my "Trend Strength" indicator — a tool that measures how much the market favors a stock, scored from -100 to +100.
This isn’t just a technical number—it’s a way to see through the noise and gauge the market’s true sentiment.
📊 I’ve prepared a screenshot of a current example—but I want to stress-test it on more names.
💬 Got a stock in mind? Drop it here and I’ll run it through the indicator live. Let’s see if the market’s whispering or shouting.


Jumping Strategies Too Soon Is a Common Cause of Failure
A key reason traders and investors fail is abandoning a sound long-term strategy during short-term underperformance.
Amateurs often chase systems that seem to always work. When their strategy hits a rough patch—as all strategies eventually do—they quickly shift to something else, hoping for immediate results.
In professional money management, this behavior is called style drift—changing strategy when results dip. It's viewed as a red flag by institutional investors because it signals lack of discipline and conviction.
Strong performance comes from consistency. Staying with a strategy through cycles—while measuring it with long-term data—is what separates professionals from performance chasers.
Is “Buy the Dip” Really a Winning Strategy?
According to What Works on Wall Street by James O’Shaughnessy, buying the worst-performing large-cap stocks—those down the most over the past 12 months—didn’t lead to gains. In fact, the data showed that buying the bottom 10% resulted in declines over the following year.
The takeaway? Momentum and quality matter more than bargain hunting. Sometimes, what looks cheap just keeps getting cheaper.
The markets are one of the most powerful tools for putting money to work efficiently. But they can just as easily erase capital when approached carelessly.
Blind faith in luck, overconfidence in so-called "blue-chip" names like Enron or WorldCom, or trusting high-fee investment funds that barely track the market—these are classic pitfalls.
Success in the market requires more than optimism. It demands discipline, skepticism, and a strategy built on risk management and performance, not hope or reputation.
I’ve seen traders achieve solid returns through a combination of hard work, structured routines, and the right coaching.
It’s not about guessing the market. It’s about putting in the effort to learn, staying disciplined, and getting feedback from those with experience.
Results come from consistency, not shortcuts.
Psychologists have long observed this bias:
We tend to attribute our wins to skill — and our losses to bad luck.
It’s human nature.
But in trading, it’s a dangerous trap.
🎯 If you take credit for every win and blame luck for every loss,
you’ll never grow — only protect your ego.
Own your process. Learn from both outcomes. That’s how real traders evolve.
Hope you're doing well and finding your rhythm in the market again.
If you're currently not engaged, or if you're struggling to stay aligned with what’s working—pause and ask yourself:
What’s the real reason? What are you missing?
Is it a lack of conviction?
Are you still stuck in the last market cycle?
Have you done the work to adapt to current conditions?
Every cycle demands a different version of you. If you’re on the sidelines, figure out if it’s strategy, mindset, or structure that’s holding you back.
Because when opportunity knocks, you don’t want hesitation to be your default.
It’s a paradox.
The only reward a trader should truly care about is a growing account balance.
Yet many obsess over achieving it through their own strategy, their own process, their own “genius.”
Why?
Because they want to feel relevant.
They want the credit.
But here’s the truth:
The market doesn’t care who designed the strategy — only if it works.
Profit is proof, not pride.
Let go of the ego.
Use what works. Master it. And let your results speak — not your attachment to originality.
Partial discipline is just a polished excuse. Real discipline is all or nothing.
The belief that a perfect strategy is out there — waiting to be found or built — is one of the biggest risks to your progress.
It’s a timewaster, a distraction, and a subtle form of procrastination.
Worse, it can become an endless rabbit hole that keeps you from ever truly executing.
There is no perfect strategy.
There’s only a robust one you understand, follow, and refine through experience.
Partial discipline is just a polished excuse. Real discipline is all or nothing.
Some funds know when to reduce exposure and when to act 

Avoid opinions. Trade the facts.
Charts don’t care what you think.
They only reflect what is.
Let price, volume, and structure guide you —
not headlines, hype, or hope.
I was genuinely excited to write this report — there are so many beautiful bases forming right now.
But Friday’s after-hours news of a U.S. debt downgrade may temporarily derail what was shaping up to be a strong setup landscape.
It feels like yet another mini black swan — a small asteroid we didn’t quite see coming.
If we break lower, it could trigger some short-term shakeouts —
But those may ultimately help form a stronger foundation for more durable, longer-term moves higher.
Edge isn’t just finding good trades — it’s weighting your capital toward the best ones
You trade your edge—not the market. Screening helps you find where your edge actually lives.
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