Markets reward preparation and punish impulse. These rules are not suggestions — they are the architecture of consistent, profitable trading.
Your account survival is paramount. Even a string of 10 consecutive losses should not cripple your capital. Position size is not about confidence — it's about longevity.
If you don't know where you're wrong before entering, you're gambling. Define your invalidation level on the chart — not on your P&L — and honor it without hesitation.
You don't need to win 70% of trades to be profitable. With a 2:1 ratio, breaking even requires only a 34% win rate. Every trade must earn the right to be placed.
Set a circuit breaker. If you lose 0.75% in a day, close the platform. Bad days cascade into bad weeks. Know when the market is not for you — today.
Desperation is visible on your charts. Trading with rent money creates emotional interference that destroys execution. Capital at risk must be psychologically detached from your survival.
"The goal of a successful trader is to make the best long-term decisions, not the most exciting short-term ones."
— Foundational Trading Principle
Write your trade thesis before entering. Entry trigger, stop, target, and size. Once in the trade, your job is execution — not second-guessing the analysis you did with a clear head.
The trend is not your enemy. Fighting it is. Identify the dominant direction on a higher timeframe, then execute on a lower one in alignment. Swimming against the tide takes exponentially more effort.
A-grade setups only. B-grade setups lead to B-grade discipline. You have a finite number of decisions — spend them where the odds are stacked in your favor. Patience is your most profitable skill.
Anticipating a move and reacting to a confirmed move are two entirely different trades. Let price show its hand first. The cost of missing the first 0.75% is far less than the cost of being wrong early.
Locking in gains at resistance and letting a portion ride is not weakness — it's capital optimization. Reduce risk while keeping upside exposure. Never let a strong winner become a loser through greed.
Liquidity is everything. The London open is when institutional money floods in, spreads tighten, and price makes its real moves. Trading before London is trading in noise — low volume, fakeouts, and traps set for the impatient.
After 9 PM, volume fades, spreads widen, and late-session moves are erratic and hard to trust. Fatigue also impairs judgment. Manage open positions if needed, but initiating new trades past this cutoff is gambling in the dark. Close the charts. Rest. Prepare for tomorrow.
Before every London session, sit at the chart for 15 focused minutes. Identify liquidity pools, mark key support and resistance levels, and establish your directional bias. This is not optional — it is the foundation your entire trading day is built on. No matter how busy life gets, these 15 minutes belong to the chart. A trader who plans wins. A trader who skips prep guesses.
Identify the prevailing trend and take trades only in its direction. Do not attempt to call tops or bottoms. A trend continues until it structurally breaks — a lower high in an uptrend, a higher low in a downtrend. Until that confirmation arrives on the chart, the trend is your only direction. Your gut is not evidence. Price structure is.
Mark your levels, then step back and let price do the work. Watch for a clear rejection candle at the level. Enter on the first clean retest of that rejection, or wait for the second retest if the first is choppy or unconvincing. Never enter mid-air between levels — that is impatience wearing a trade's clothes. Price will always return to significant levels. Your only job is to wait for it.
The train leaving without you is a minor loss. Chasing it is how you get hurt. There will always be another setup. FOMO-driven entries are almost always bad entries — bought at the top of the move.
The market does not know or care about your last trade. Revenge trading is an attempt to emotionally balance a ledger that the market will never acknowledge. Step away. Reset. Return with clarity.
Elite traders show up prepared, not reactive. Review key levels, upcoming catalysts, and your watchlist before the open. Your first 30 minutes of analysis is worth more than 3 hours of reactive screen time.
Your trade journal is your greatest edge. Document entry, exit, thesis, emotion, and outcome. Patterns in your mistakes are not random — they repeat until you see them, study them, and remove them.
Every business has expenses. Losing trades are the cost of accessing winning ones. A stopped-out trade executed properly is a good trade. An emotionally held loser is always a bad trade, regardless of outcome.
Price has memory. Levels where buyers and sellers clashed before will attract attention again. These are your roadmaps — mark them clearly, trade around them, and let the crowd fight at them while you position intelligently.
NFP, FOMC, CPI — these events create chaotic, spread-widening, slippage-prone environments. Unless news trading is your specific edge, reduce or close positions before major releases. Discretion is a strategy.
When institutions move, price moves with conviction. A sudden surge in volume signals intent — align with it, not against it. Retail traders who fight institutional order flow provide liquidity for others' profits.
A trending market rewards momentum. A range-bound market rewards mean-reversion. Using the wrong tool in the wrong environment is a structural disadvantage. Recognize the regime. Adjust accordingly.
Markets evolve. Your edge today may not exist tomorrow. Monthly performance reviews, strategy backtesting, and honest self-assessment are non-negotiable. The traders who survive long-term are perpetual students of the market.
The market will test
every single rule
on this list.
The difference between traders who survive and traders who don't is not intelligence — it's the consistent application of these principles, especially when it's hardest.