There comes a point in every trader’s journey where the noise around you becomes louder than the voice inside you. It’s easy to chase opinions, ask for reassurance, wait for someone else to tell you you’re right. But that’s not trading like a pro. That’s trading like a passenger. At some point you have to stop asking for permission and start trusting the work you’ve put in. Your gut only becomes valuable once it’s backed by thousands of hours on the charts. Confidence doesn’t come from being told you’re right. It comes from knowing you can handle being wrong.
Most traders are trapped because they outsource their decision making. They jump in and out of trades based on someone else’s commentary or their own doubt. They never commit fully because they’re scared to own the outcome. A real trader steps into uncertainty with clarity. You make the call. You live with the result. You adjust. And you grow. When you finally stop needing validation, everything shifts. You start playing your game, not somebody else’s.
Trading becomes powerful when your decisions are truly yours. That’s when the wins feel earned and the losses teach you something real. You don’t hide from them or blame the market or blame someone else’s bias. You own the process. That’s where the level ups happen. The moment you take full responsibility, you stop being tossed around by emotions and start building the confidence that comes from self trust. Own your opinions. Own your trades. Own your success. That’s what separates a pro from everyone else.
If you get good enough at reading context (Narrative for NADRO folks) - I'm telling you guys... it's just duking it out with randomness with a halfway decent execution methodology from there. A solid risk plan. A solid mental framework to stay objective. A decent trade management plan to handle winners. Boom you are there.
There is no perfect blanket advice. I see some not serious enough about process, and I see others going way overboard and nit picking everything thinking they can arrive at perfection (they can't).
Now go read the first paragraph again.
Really enjoyed the time with @KorbsTrading . This is an interview all about risk-management and how it is applied by different traders with different objectives.
https://t.co/Sfj9w9K2oo
#trading#Traders#futurestrading
I've noticed a lot of ego among traders lately. Who's the best, who has what, who did this... who cares? In my early trading years, my ego almost ruined me and my career.
At 30 years old, with a million-dollar account and multiple seats at CME, I could have eased off full-time trading, invested most, and kept a small day trading account looking at semi-retirement in my 30s. Instead, I tried to keep up with the Joneses, owning three houses, multiple cars, and aggressively trading for more. It wasn't enough for me; I wanted to be the best.
After a small drawdown and quiet markets, I found myself in a bad situation even though I wasn't losing money, I was making far less. I had rent at CBOT, clerks, a Bloomberg terminal, and an expensive lifestyle.
Now with really slow markets, panic set in, forcing trades and I started to lose more. My seats and homes lost value, leaving me worth much less. I had lost sight of why I started trading. I wanted financial freedom, but instead, I created a financial disaster.
Narrowly recovering, I sold seats, sold two homes, and had a heart attack at 36 due to recklessness. This moment was a blessing, as it forced me to slow things down. Telling me to enjoy the process, cherish success, and be content with others' success. There's always someone better than you. There's always someone with more money than you. In the end, you trade for yourself, and how you match up against anyone else means nothing.
To my fellow newer traders: slow down, stay humble, quietly build wealth, respect others and this business. A better future awaits for you and your family.
Cheers, DELI
More effort in trading does not mean more reward *when it comes to actually trading*. The effort that pays more is effort outside of the actual actions of trading.
-Use multiple timeframes effectively
-Understand conditions of balance
-Areas, not lines
-Deploy a lower timeframe to help maximize R/R further
-Learn to read orderflow to dial in the here and now details (while keeping it in perspective)
-Dial all this in by writing out as detailed of a trading process as you can, then monitor how effectively you can execute it. Refine things, learn about yourself, grow. Get plugged in with other solid folks to create a better environment than just you alone. (aka prop desk like Apteros).
EASY MONEY TRADES MAKE TRADING CAREERS!
My presentation from the incredible 2024 @smbcapital traders summit is now live!
https://t.co/3MsDkrS2q4
CC: @traderkylec (might be useful given our last convo)
I don't think many folks realize that good traders and bad traders BOTH have many of the same hairbrained ideas or impulses that pop into their minds (often emotional) during the session. The bad trader is driven to action of some type, but the good trader does nothing.
How do the good traders do nothing in those moments?
They have learned the combination of:
1) process/checklist/must-have's for a good trade, and
2) they have learned to 'consciously check in' when they have the subconscious idea/impulse.
That's really it. I could go on and on about details, but that's the gist of what separates MANY in this game.
It takes a lot of WORK to both develop & get a deep understanding of your process/methodology/best trading (and perhaps your worst too), combined with the WORK required to improve that conscious awareness thinking.
For many (probably most) this doesn't involve a ton of what you'd think of as 'psychology work'. It's more a thing of (through pain and deep STUDY/REVIEW work) finding out little things that work and little things that don't work. Could be price based, could be indicator based, etc. You start to put together one little thing after another that either stacks odds in favor of a situation, or against.
This is how you end up with some traders that can't really explain their method/edge very succinctly. It's kind of subconscious- all the little learnings. Others (like me) work to bring all those things out to a more objective place where they can be studied further and understood more.
Know what to do, and consciously take actions that line up with that knowledge is one final way of putting it differently. Cheers.
"Consistency of preparation and practice creates consistency of performance." ⬇️👊
For the active trader specifically this means a daily routine of:
Daily Report Card
PlayBook
Tradervue
Highlight Real
Easy Money Trades
Collaborate
Build technology
Book of Charts
Daily Journal
Bringing your best you to trading sessions
-Mindfulness, exercise, sleep, diet
*I will be speaking more on this at The SMB Annual Event this weekend in NYC...
The LAYOUT of your charts on your screens can have a big impact on your trading. Here's a few tips:
1) Make the most important charts/tools where your eyes fall naturally ahead of you.
2) Also make most important things larger
3) If any $ PL stuff has to be there, put it out on the periphery, and smaller
4) Make sure you think through a "flow" in terms of eyeball movement. Things, sequentially checked on via a process driven approach, should flow from left to right, top to bottom, etc.
5) If flipping through multiple markets/symbols - utilize the exact same layout for all of them as you tab through markets you know exactly where to looks for what you need to see.
6) Always be on the hunt for anything taking up space or added to charts that isn't objectively being used as a part of your methods - get rid of it.
Good luck!
One of the hardest skills to develop is consistent application .
One of the most powerful edges you can develop is how you apply yourself to skill development . Most #traders think you need a strategy or an indicator .
What you need is to consistently apply yourself daily
This was a fun interview as well as my first. I'm sure all my followers know me, however being interviewed and sharing sort of a broader insight just gives a different perspective: https://t.co/UMOEif6krJ
Also there's a great section we're I talk about self hypnosis and how I review my trades via a recorded self induced trance. Lately I've been wanting to really expand into this. So I'll have more content on it.
Thanks again @KorbsTrading for a fun time!
I really like The work @KorbsTrading is doing engaging with traders and getting to the heart of what drives trading performances. This was a fun episode. Comment on what was your fav part . #trading#trader
If you are leaning into a “these prices are crazy” or “how can we keep going up?” narrative. Allow me to remind you that there is no such thing as overbought markets. There are accepted and rejected prices. As long as higher prices are accepted….ANY price higher is possible!