When Trading Decisions Stop Being Mechanical
Most traders know what to do. The problem starts when mechanical trading decisions break down after being wrong once. That hesitation usually shows up after …
Most traders know what to do. The problem starts when mechanical trading decisions break down after being wrong once. That hesitation usually shows up after …
One of the biggest traps in trading is bias — expecting the last move to continue. What does that look like? After a sharp decline, …
Consistency in trading doesn’t come from one big win. It comes from repeating a process across different trades. We recently saw this in action in …
Markets often tempt traders to think about what might happen next. But the real measure of a trade is not endless speculation—it’s whether the move …
I’m pleased to share my newest course, the result of months of focused work. The Hidden Order is a course built on the same Mathematical …
Yesterday, we discussed why good entries aren’t enough. The real test lies in how and where you exit the trade. This week’s Nifty move is …
In the previous post, we explained why random entries cause random results. Entering trades without a plan makes trading purely a matter of chance. But …
Most traders don’t fail because they don’t work hard. They fail because they trade without a precise, clear plan. They see a price move, jump …
Most traders focus on market direction — but direction alone doesn’t make a winning trade.. Every strong move forms in stages, and waiting until those …
In trading, not every price move is what it appears to be. Sometimes the market looks weak, only to reverse. At other times, it makes a …