The trading journal for momentum day traders.
DAS · Webull · more loading.
Built in public by one trader. No gurus, no signals, just better journaling.
7/7 Which trader were you today?
FugaEdge captures distance from the 9 EMA the second you click buy — no memory, no honesty required.
Beta open. (Chart and outcomes above are an illustrative example.)
#buildinpublic#daytrading
1/7 Three traders bought the same stock. Same minute.
Only one got paid — and the entry that felt safest is the one that donated.
The difference is one column your journal doesn't have. Thread:
6/7 The missing column: distance from the 9 EMA at entry.
At the line. Stretched. Chased.
Add that one column and the identical rows split into the paid and the donors.
Ed Seykota: "The elements of good trading are: cutting losses, cutting losses, and cutting losses."
He said it three times on purpose. Protect the downside — the upside takes care of itself.
#buildinpublic#daytrading
Your P&L cheers for you. FugaEdge keeps you honest. Every trade scored against your rules — win or lose. Your discipline as a number. Beta open. (Illustrative example.) #buildinpublic#daytrading
So the Friday review question isn't "how much did I make?" That measures luck. It's "how many trades followed my rules?" That measures skill — the only number that carries into Monday.
Jesse Livermore, ~100 years ago: "Markets are never wrong. Opinions often are."
"It can't go higher" is an opinion. The market doesn't owe it anything.
Read what is happening, not what should.
#buildinpublic#daytrading
7/7 FugaEdge's Technical Analysis maps every entry by distance from the 9 EMA — with the pullback tagged.
Find where YOUR edge lives, not a rule of thumb.
Beta open. (Illustrative example.)
#buildinpublic#daytrading
1/7 Chasing lost me money.
Being extended made me money.
Same candle. Same distance from the 9 EMA. Two charts, two paths to the identical candle — and only one is a trade.
Thread:
6/7 The twist: edges are personal.
Some traders print on extended entries. Others only at the line. Rules of thumb are averages — your data is you.
Some traders win exactly where others bleed.