A pilot doesn't abandon the flight plan mid-journey just because the skies are quiet. Are you navigating the markets with your proven route, or are you just flying by the seat of your pants?
(New Metaphors)
Regard your trading strategy as that immutable flight plan—a route that has been rigorously tested and calculated for the highest probability of a safe arrival. You are the pilot in the cockpit. Your critical role is not to invent a new destination on a whim, but to execute the established plan, trusting your instruments to guide you through any weather.
Don't deviate into uncharted airspace just because you've hit a stretch of calm and feel impatient. That is the quickest path into a storm. A pilot who ignores their flight plan becomes the single greatest danger to the journey, inviting a catastrophic crash. For a trader, that crash is your account hitting zero. Trust your instruments, follow the plan, and navigate with discipline
Let's call yesterday what it was: RDDT was a textbook institutional distribution day. A massive gap up on a surge of volume that gets sold into all day, closing near the low?
That's not a dip to buy. That's a giant red flag.
The professionals used the excitement and the strength of the gap to unload their shares onto amateurs who were chasing the "good move."
The stock is now guilty until proven innocent. The breakout has failed, and the chart is damaged.
Here is your new task: Go find a chart of a stock that had a similar powerful reversal day.
Analyze what it did over the next two months.
Did it collapse? Did it chop sideways for weeks before setting up again? Study the price action of failure.
You learn more from autopsies than you do from success stories.
Stop looking for your next trade and start building a model book based on what price action is actually telling you.
Want feedback on your charts?
Feel free to send me your graphs via private message — I’ll be happy to share my perspective.
As organizations grow in size and complexity, there is a natural tendency to manage through proxies—indirect measures that stand in for actual results.
This is a subtle but dangerous "Day 2" behavior. The most common and insidious proxy is process.
Good process exists to serve customers, but if an organization is not vigilant, the process can become "the thing".
The focus shifts from achieving a desired outcome to correctly following the prescribed steps
#Northvolt failed on this
For the vast majority of market participants, the weekend represents a period of rest, a welcome respite from the relentless flow of quotes and news that defines the trading week. For the elite market professional, however, the weekend is transformed. It is not downtime; it is the most critical phase of preparation, where the foundation for the coming week’s success is meticulously laid
Trading or Betting?
Right now, market conditions are so unstable that opening a trade feels more like placing a bet than making a calculated move.
When volatility is high and direction unclear, discipline matters more than action.
You don’t need to be in a trade every day. Sitting on your hands can be a strategy too.
📌 Reminder: Trade only when your edge is present — not just because the market is open.
The eruption of direct military conflict between Israel and Iran on June 13, 2025, presented global financial markets with a severe geopolitical shock. Intuition suggests that such a significant escalation of hostilities in a critical region should trigger a sustained downturn in risk assets. However, the market's reaction proved to be far more complex and, on the surface, paradoxical. After an initial, sharp sell-off across global indices, U.S. stock futures—including the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100—rebounded and were trading in positive territory by the following Monday, June 16. This report provides an exhaustive, multi-layered explanation for this seemingly contradictory market behavior
The eruption of direct military conflict between Israel and Iran on June 13, 2025, presented global financial markets with a severe geopolitical shock. Intuition suggests that such a significant escalation of hostilities in a critical region should trigger a sustained downturn in risk assets. However, the market's reaction proved to be far more complex and, on the surface, paradoxical. After an initial, sharp sell-off across global indices, U.S. stock futures—including the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100—rebounded and were trading in positive territory by the following Monday, June 16. This report provides an exhaustive, multi-layered explanation for this seemingly contradictory market behavior
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange 35 Index dropped 1.5% at Sunday’s open, continuing last week’s 1.5% decline. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index fell 2.5%, while Egypt’s EGX 30 Index plunged 7.7%—marking its steepest drop in over a year. With regional exchanges closed on Friday, today’s sharp moves reflect a buildup of uncertainty and risk aversion heading into the new week.
Procrastination isn’t laziness—it’s a side effect of comfort. When your environment feels safe, your brain sees no urgency to act. That illusion of security kills momentum and delays growth.
Just listen to Market wizard or read about them and you will learn that.
What sets elite traders apart from the pack? It’s not just motivation—it’s relentless action!
In casinos and financial markets alike, success hinges on maintaining a positive statistical advantage—or “edge”—over a sufficiently large number of trials.
For casinos, the edge is built into the rules of each game; it is the mathematical assurance that, over millions of spins, hands, or rolls, the house will collect more than it pays out.
For traders, an edge emerges from carefully constructed strategies—quantitative models, fundamental insights, or both—that offer a statistical expectation of profit over time. Yet, both realms must grapple with short-term variance (“luck” in the casino context, “drawdowns” in trading) and the potential for anomalous outcomes that defy expectations.
In both environments, operators deploy rigorous statistical monitoring to distinguish ordinary fluctuations from genuine threats to their edge: cheating or mechanical errors in casinos; changing market regimes or model breakdowns in trading.
Imagine you’re a carpenter about to build a custom bookshelf. You don’t just grab wood and start hammering—you first measure every board, check the thickness of the shelves, note how tall and wide it needs to be, and ask: “Will it fit under that low ceiling?”
In trading, your “bookshelf” is your model book—a collection of chart patterns, setups, and rules that you’ve measured, tested, and documented.
You need to know every dimension of each pattern: How deep is the drawdown? How many days does it take to form? What market conditions were present? Without those measurements, you’re hammering blind.
#trading
The true difference between successful traders and average ones?
Successful traders show up and execute—even when they’re not motivated.
Don’t get me wrong: inspiration and motivation are powerful tools. They help you push further and tap into your best.
But they’re not always there. And when they’re not, discipline takes over.
Consistency doesn’t come from feelings. It comes from commitment.
How is your weekend screening doing?