Risk Management Rules That Save AccountsSummary
You lower impulsive errors at the open by running a one minute pre market checklist that begins with a threat label. You then walk five gates for news, volatility, risk, size, and stop. The routine is simple, fast, and repeatable. It creates a small pause that shifts you from emotional reaction to planned execution. This is education and analytics only.
Decision architecture under stress . Name it to tame it. A short written label reduces limbic reactivity and gives the planning system a window of control.
Why this matters
Most bad sessions begin before the first click. Fatigue, caffeine spikes, fear of missing out, and a cluttered screen push the brain toward shortcuts. The checklist gives you a tiny container of time where you look at the day with clear eyes. One minute is enough. The goal is not perfection. The goal is a stable entry state and a hard off switch when risk boundaries are reached.
The one minute routine
Threat label . Write one sentence that names your current state in plain language. Example: Slept five hours, feel rushed, second coffee, mild anxiety. This is affect labeling.
News gate . Scan the calendar for high impact items. Decide if size is reduced or if a filter is active around event times.
Volatility gate . Classify the regime as normal or high by reading average true range or a recent range. High regime shrinks size and widens stop distance inside your plan.
Risk gate . Confirm risk per trade, the max daily loss, and the rule that stops new entries for the day.
Session gate . Choose your focus window. Define a time box. Write one line that states your setup and the review point.
Principle one — the threat label
The label is short, neutral, and written. You are not trying to be poetic. You are moving the experience from the body into words so that attention can be allocated with intent. Include four elements.
Sleep . Hours and quality. Broken sleep counts as low quality.
Fatigue . Subjective rating from 1 to 5 where 3 is workable.
Stimulants . Caffeine count and timing. Early heavy intake tends to raise urgency.
Emotion . One word such as calm, rushed, irritated, fearful, confident.
Add a mood score from 1 to 5. If the score is 1 or 2 you move to simulation or wait fifteen minutes after the open. If the score is 3 or higher you can proceed with the five gates at reduced size when the day feels heavy. The act of naming is not a cure. It is a lever that opens a window where better choices are available.
Principle two — breathing as a switch
Use a physiological sigh or box breathing for sixty seconds when arousal is high.
Physiological sigh: inhale through the nose, take a short second inhale to top off, then exhale slowly through the mouth. Repeat five times.
Box breathing: inhale for four, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four. Repeat for one minute.
This is not about relaxation. It is about coming back to a steady baseline so that the gates can be applied without haste.
Principle three — time boxing and two strike control
Time without boundaries invites drift. Choose a primary window. Add a two strike rule. Two avoidable mistakes or two full stops and you switch to review mode. This is a hard rule. You can always restart in simulation. The account does not need you to win today. It needs you to preserve optionality for tomorrow.
The five gates in depth
Gate 1. Threat label details
Format . One sentence. Neutral tone. No judgment.
Signal . If the label uses words like frantic, desperate, angry, or invincible you reduce size or you step back. Extreme emotion is a red flag.
Action . If the label is heavy, attach a micro plan. Example: Watch the first range print, take one A quality setup only, then review.
Why it works. The label hijacks the loop that pairs sensation with urgency. By assigning words you create distance. Distance allows choice. Choice reduces error.
Gate 2. News gate details
Scan . Look for clustered items such as inflation prints, policy statements, or employment data.
Filter . If an item is imminent you set a no trade buffer around it. Five minutes is a good default for the day session. Longer buffers can be used when events are central to the day.
Size . On days with dense events you run smaller. Your goal is survival and clarity, not heroics.
Reasoning. Event periods change the distribution of short term outcomes. The checklist assumes there are times to engage and times to wait. Waiting is a skill.
Gate 3. Volatility gate details
Classification . Use a simple rule such as normal regime when the rolling range is near its median and high regime when it is in the upper quartile. You do not need complex math here.
Translation . High regime implies half size and wider stops within your plan. Normal regime allows baseline size and standard stops.
Exit awareness . Volatility is not a gift and not a threat. It is a condition. When it is extreme your first task is to avoid clips that come from noise.
The psychology note. When volatility rises your heart rate rises and the mind searches for action. The gate reminds you that you do not need to swing at every pitch. You need to scale your effort to the environment.
Gate 4. Risk gate details
Risk per trade . Choose a range that respects your current skill. Many traders use values between 0.25 percent and 0.50 percent while they build consistency. Use your data.
Max daily loss . Choose a hard cap between 1.5 percent and 2.5 percent. The exact figure is less important than the enforcement.
Stop trading rule . When the max is reached you stop. You move to review mode. You do not attempt a last minute rescue. You treat tomorrow as a fresh session.
Psychology note. Most blowups do not come from one bad idea. They come from the refusal to stop when the day is off. The risk gate eliminates that refusal by binding action to a predefined boundary.
Gate 5. Session gate details
Focus . Choose one session. Focus beats breadth. Split focus is a silent drain.
Window . Define the first hour as your primary window and stick to it. The goal is quality not quantity.
Written micro plan . One line that states what you are allowed to take. One line that states when you stand down.
Time discipline creates high quality boredom. High quality boredom is where patience grows.
The one minute card
Copy this card and keep it next to your screen.
Threat label: Today I feel … because …
Mood 1 to 5: __
Sleep hours: __
Caffeine cups: __
Five gates
News: list items and times.
Volatility: normal or high.
Risk: risk per trade and max daily loss.
Size: full or half.
Stop: exit rule and stop trading rule.
Session plan
Primary session: __
Window: first sixty minutes
Setup: described in one line
Review: five notes after the first trade
Bias management
Your checklist doubles as a bias tracker. Below are common traps and their counters.
Fomo . The urge to enter early because price is moving. Counter : read your session plan line out loud and wait for the condition that defines your setup.
Revenge . The urge to win back a loss. Counter : two strike rule. After two avoidable errors you switch to review.
Confirmation . The habit of seeking only data that supports the current idea. Counter : write one invalidation condition in your micro plan before each entry.
Sunk cost . Staying with a poor position because time and effort were invested. Counter : use structure based exits and honor them without debate.
Outcome bias . Judging process by result. Counter : score the decision quality in your journal independent of profit and loss.
Recency . Overweighting the last outcome. Counter : review three prior similar sessions before the open.
Anchoring . Fixating on a number seen early. Counter : update levels using the most recent structure and ranges.
Gambler fallacy . Expecting balance in small samples. Counter : treat each setup as independent and sized by plan.
Environment design
Your surroundings push behavior. Design them on purpose.
Screen hygiene . Close unrelated tabs. Remove flashing items. Keep only the chart, the calendar, and your checklist.
Desk card . Print the one minute card. Physical presence increases compliance.
Timer . Use a simple timer for your first window. When it ends you review by default before you extend.
Journal access . Keep the journal one click away. Reduce friction to writing.
Standing rule sheet . Place the two strike rule and the max daily loss in large font at eye level.
Journal method
A short consistent journal beats a long sporadic one. Use five lines per session.
Threat label . Copy the exact sentence you wrote.
Gate notes . News, volatility classification, risk settings, session window.
Two key decisions . What you took and why.
Discipline score . Rate from 1 to 5 based on process quality.
Next session intent . One line that you can act on tomorrow.
Once a week add a short review.
Count how many times the max daily loss was hit.
Count how many sessions began with a score of 1 or 2 and what you did in response.
Note one pattern you want more of and one behavior you want less of.
Comparator — checklist day versus reactive day
A checklist day has five visible differences.
Entries occur inside the written setup line rather than outside of it.
Size reflects volatility classification rather than emotion.
News windows are respected rather than ignored.
The two strike rule switches you to review rather than escalation.
Post session notes exist and inform the next session.
A reactive day shows the opposite pattern. You can measure this. Track three numbers for a month.
Number of impulsive entries per session.
Number of max daily loss hits per week.
Average emotional intensity rating captured in the first five minutes of the session.
Expect the checklist month to show fewer impulsive entries, fewer max loss days, and lower opening intensity. The goal is stable execution and preserved capital for learning.
Scenarios and how to apply the gates
Low sleep morning
Threat label notes low sleep and mild irritability. Mood 2.
Action is simulation or a fifteen minute wait after the open. Coffee is delayed. You observe the first range and journal one line without taking risk.
Outcome is a cleaner state for the second half of the hour or a full stand down without regret.
Clustered event day
Threat label notes excitement and urgency.
News gate shows several items within the first hour. Filter is applied. Size is reduced.
Two strike rule is activated with extra caution due to the environment.
High volatility regime
Volatility gate classifies the day as high using a simple rolling range rule.
Size is cut in half. Stops are placed at a distance that matches the regime inside your plan.
You aim for one A quality setup and then you review.
Emotional drift after early win
Threat label catches the rise of euphoria and the phrase I can push it.
Risk gate reminds you that risk per trade remains constant. Size does not increase without a monthly review and data.
You write a single intent line to protect the day from giving back an early gain.
Emotional drift after early loss
Threat label captures frustration and the urge to get it back.
You pause for a breathing cycle. You re read the setup line. You allow the next clean condition or you stop.
If you reach two avoidable errors you switch to review mode by rule.
Building the habit
Habits form when three conditions exist. A cue, a simple action, and a visible reward.
Cue . The first launch of your platform is the cue. The card sits in front of the keyboard.
Action . You write the threat label and walk the five gates. It takes one minute.
Reward . You check off a visible box on a small tracker. Ten sessions completed equals a micro reward of your choice that does not increase arousal.
Use streak tracking. Breaking a streak is a useful signal. Ask why with curiosity, not shame.
Risk of ruin as a psychological anchor
Ruin is the end of the game. You reduce ruin probability by keeping the max daily loss small, by sizing positions inside your plan, and by cutting activity when the state is poor. The checklist operationalizes this. You do not need to compute formulas every morning. You need to enforce boundaries in real time.
Plain language rules you can post above your monitor
Write a threat label before the open.
Respect event windows without exception.
Match size to volatility.
Stop at the max daily loss.
Run a small time box and review by default when it ends.
Metrics that keep you honest
Track the following numbers each week.
Sessions with the card completed.
Sessions that reached the max daily loss.
Impulsive entries per session.
Average mood score at the open.
Average discipline score at the close.
Make a tiny table with ten rows that covers two weeks. This takes five minutes and will reveal whether the checklist is real or theater.
Frequently asked questions
Can I apply this to longer timeframes
Yes. The gates do not change. Only the windows change. The principle remains the same. Protect the mind, protect the account, and execute the plan.
Should I scale size after a win
No, not inside the day. Size changes are a monthly decision informed by data and by a stable discipline score. Day level changes usually reflect emotion rather than edge.
What if fear is very high
Use one cycle of the physiological sigh and one cycle of box breathing. Write the label. If the score remains 1 or 2 your best decision is to observe and learn without risk.
What if I fail the routine for a week
Do a small reset. Print a fresh card. Shorten the window. Reduce goals. Your only task is to complete the card for three sessions in a row.
What about accountability
Share your five line journal with one trusted peer. No opinions. No trade calls. Only the five lines. This light social pressure improves compliance.
Risks and failure modes
Liquidity pockets . Thin periods can distort short term structure. The solution is to reduce activity rather than to force entries.
Event clusters . When several items land in the same session, conditions can whipsaw. The solution is to go smaller or to wait for the post event phase.
Emotional drift . After two losses the urge to fight rises. The solution is the two strike rule and a physical walk away trigger.
Overfitting the checklist . A card with twenty questions will not be used. Keep it at one minute.
Rationalization . The mind can twist rules in real time. The solution is to write numbers before the session and follow them when it is hardest.
From routine to identity
Behavior sticks when it becomes who you are. You can call yourself a routine first trader. That means you respect the card before you respect your opinions. You can call yourself a review first trader. That means you treat the journal as part of the session rather than an afterthought. Identity makes rules easier to keep because breaking them feels like breaking character.
Closing summary
The pre market checklist is a small lever with large impact. You begin with a written threat label that pulls emotion into words. You pass five gates that cover news, volatility, risk, size, and stop. You work inside a time box and you accept the two strike rule. You record five lines and you adjust week by week. There is no promise of profit. There is only the reliable reduction of avoidable errors and the protection of your decision making capacity. The rest follows from consistent behavior over time.
Education and analytics only. Not investment advice. No performance promises.
CHECKLIST
Examples of invalid setups | Judas Swing Strategy 07/04/2025As traders, it's crucial to spend time in the lab backtesting your strategy and exploring ways to optimize it for better performance in live markets. You’ll start to notice recurring patterns, some that work in your favor, and others that consistently lead to unnecessary losses. It might take time to spot these patterns and even longer to refine them to fit your trading system, but going through this process is what helps you evolve. In the long run, this is what you need to do to become a better trader.
We spent a considerable amount of time refining our entry technique for the Judas Swing strategy after noticing a recurring issue where entering with a limit order sometimes gets us stopped out on the very same candle. After testing a few alternative entry methods and making some key adjustments, we finally found an approach that worked consistently for us. On Monday, April 7th, 2025, this refinement proved its worth by saving us from two potentially painful losses. In this post, we’ll walk you through exactly what happened and how the improved entry made all the difference.
We got to our trading desks ready to scout for setups and were drawn to promising setups forming on both FX:AUDUSD and $NZDUSD. This was exciting since the previous week offered no solid trading opportunities. As price swept the liquidity resting above the highs of the zone our bias quickly shifted toward potential selling setups for the session. But before taking any trade, we always ensure every item on our entry checklist is met. Here’s what we look for:
1. A break of structure to the sell side
2. The formation of a Fair Value Gap (FVG)
3. A retracement into the FVG
4. Entry only after a confirmed candle close
With the first two requirements on our checklist confirmed, all that remained were the final two and at this stage, patience is key. As price began retracing toward the FVG on both FX:AUDUSD and OANDA:NZDUSD , things got interesting. Price came into the Fair Value Gap on both pairs, checking off the third requirement. Now, all that was left was to wait for the current candle to close.
But that’s where things will be clear to you now.
Had we jumped in early with a limit order, we would’ve been stopped out on the same candle. This moment served as a perfect reminder of why we now wait for a confirmed candle close before taking any trade. It’s this extra step that helps us avoid unnecessary losses and stick to high-quality setups.
This entry technique like any other, comes with its own set of pros and cons. At times a limit order might offer a more favorable entry price compared to waiting for a candle close and that can influence both your stop-loss and take-profit placements. On the flip side, there are also instances where waiting for the candle close gives you a better entry than the limit order would have. That’s why it’s so important to backtest.
Your job as a trader is to put in the time to study and test what works best for your system. We chose this candle close entry method because we did the work. After extensive backtesting and data analysis, we found this approach aligns best with the results we aim for in the long run.
What to do when you miss a reversalSometimes we are not very focused or we are busy and dont see an important event coming. In this case I use zone to zone.
When the price is about to break a zone I look at candle close beneath or above the zone from M15 to H1. The higher the time frame the stronger the confirmation. When momentum is strong, i use M15.
1. Wait for candle close (beware of fake outs)
2. Wait for pullback/ use RSI
3. Take a look at News and your checklist
DJ with no data + Things to RepeatFun fact: I dont know what happened to all that movement from last week, i m also pretty sure I m not an alien, but I had more data on friday which dissappeared...
Checklist to repeat:
1. Do I have a clear direction?
2. Is momentum going towards my direction already, or do I want to enter premomentum? If so, do I have confirmation of general (higher timeframe) momentum -> candle /wig size, candle pattern
3. Entry - is this the right entry for an upcoming idea (do not chase old ideas, if you missed entry there are 100 new ones)
If yes, yes, yes and News is ok, pull the trigger.
How to create trading strategy and use the Omega ToolkitThe Omega Toolkit has been designed and created in order to make traders better understand and respect their trading style.
I have created this toolkit as a former technical financial analyst (certified by S.I.A.T.) to give access to anyone at a low cost to highly effective trading tools that can be used to create a lot of trading strategies that suit any style of trading.
Each strategy that you know or ever will apply to the markets is a combination of different variables, commonly known under the name “checklist”. Unfortunately, many traders use in their trading strategy a lot of different tools that answer the same question or analyze the same data, that’s why I have created the Omega Toolkit, to classify and organize the best tools for every checklist point.
These variables can be categorized into 4 main points:
1. The first one is the Trend parameter, this point answers the question “buy or sell”, long story short it provides the direction of the trade you’re looking to. Usually, for this point, many traders like to use the 200 period moving average, others like to use the market structure, and others use more advanced tools like the volume profile, but at the end of the day, they all answer the same question and use multiple tools that answer to the same question can lead to an analysis that overvalues some price data and undervalues some others. Many traders like to use also fundamental analysis to determine the trend parameter, with macroeconomics data or another type of analysis just like the seasonality.
2. The second one is the Location point, this variable aims to make the trader buy low and sell high, and the main purpose is to provide the risk-to-reward asymmetry. One general rule to follow regarding this aspect is to decide with attention to your entry and exit points. To decide that, keep in mind that you want the price to have the most amount of resistance (or support) between your entry point and your stop loss, while you want the price to have a “clear path” from your entry price level until your previously decided to take profit. To answer this point, many traders like to use the standard Fibonacci retracement or the Smart money concepts technique, but in reality, any tool or analysis can be used as long as it provides a clear price level that can be used to determine whenever the price is in a discount zone, in a premium zone or in his fair price value.
3. The third one is the Signal point, which is used to determine the exact moment to enter the trade you already have programmed. This point is very important because it gives us confirmation of the fact that the short-term trend is aligned with the long-term trend. An essential tip about this is that no strategy is effective on the market if the strategy starts from the signal or is based on that.
4. The fourth and last point is the Filter, which aims to increase the win rate of the strategy by giving an additional confirmation to the trade you have found thanks to the Trend and the Location parameters. An important information about this variable is that in order to be effective it should analyze a different kind of data compared to the other three parameters. For example, if you have chosen to utilize all only-price variables as analysis for the Trend, Location, and Signal points, you should use something different just like an indicator that analyzes volume, momentum, volatility, or strength in his data.
In order to have a good strategy your checklist should have at least one point for every categorization. Having more than one can lead to an increase in performance and also a huge decrease in the overall trade number.
Here, with the Omega Tools, I provide 3 tools that can be used to create some effective trading strategies using both statistics and logic. The Omega Toolkit is created to work all together, even if you don’t want to use all three tools, your strategy in order to be optimal has to cover the other previously described points.
With the Omega Trend, I provide an indicator that contains a lot of features both for the Trend parameter and the Signal one. The overlay indicator can be used for assistance both in the Trend and Location points, meanwhile, the candle coloring aim to be the ultimate indication of the trend direction, including in the formula a lot of different indicators that analyze both the price, the volume, and other variables. The signal, displayed as small points over or below the candle is a great tool to find the optimal entry and exit points once found the trade you want to take.
The Omega Analyst contains many tools chosen to be highly effective to determine the Location point (even if some of them can be used also as a Trend point). To have the best risk-to-reward ratio, you should be looking for a below-average or discount situation if you’re looking for a buy, and an above-average or premium situation if you’re looking to sell the asset.
The Omega Oscillator is the last tool of the Omega Toolkit and contains various tools that can be used mainly as filters for your trade, but you can also use it as a Signal or Location point. The oscillator you want to use, and the condition that the oscillator should have in order to verify the trade, should be determined previously and precisely in order to not make mistakes and have an objective analysis.
Summing all what has been said, the procedure to find a trade can go like this:
1. You find the direction of the trade thanks to the Trend point and your general technical analysis or smart money concepts analysis.
2. You identify the main level or zone to enter into the position
3. Once the price is in the zone or touched the level and respected the condition you previously identified, you wait for the signal.
4. Once the signal has been plotted (at candle closed) you verify the trade with your Filter parameter previously chosen.
5. If confirmed, you chose your entry point (or enter with a market order) and your exit points (both take profit and stop loss) that can be either fixed or dynamic and trailing.
The Omega Toolkit has a very big feature, customizability: thanks to this, you can (and should) adapt the parameters of the indicators to the market conditions. These conditions are the kind of asset you’re trading, the market condition, the time frame, and even the period of the year you’re currently in.
It’s not the tool that you chose to use that creates your strategy, it’s the way to use them in order to determine if you should enter the market or not; many tools can be used for different purposes, for example, you could use the seasonality of an asset both for the trend parameter to determine the direction or as a filter to increase the win rate, you could use the price relation to a moving average to analyze the direction of the trend or to identify the retracement levels, and I could continue for almost any tools available for technical analysis.
If you have any suggestions or anything you’d like to say, just leave a comment down here and we’ll talk about it!
📈Mastering Forex Trading: Your Ultimate Trade Checklist📉
✅Entering the forex market can be an exciting and potentially profitable endeavor. However, it requires careful planning and diligent decision-making to succeed. One essential tool to streamline your trading process is a trade checklist. In this article, we will guide you through the creation and effective use of a trade checklist, providing practical examples along the way.
📌Preparing for a Trade:
Before you pull the trigger on any trade, it's crucial to conduct thorough analysis and set clear objectives. Ensure your trade checklist includes the following elements:
▪️Identify the Market Trend: Determine the overall direction of the currency pair you wish to trade. Consider using various technical indicators, such as moving averages or trend lines, to confirm the trend.
▪️Define Entry and Exit Criteria: Set precise entry and exit points to minimize emotion-driven decisions. Identify key levels of support and resistance, and determine the minimum risk-to-reward ratio you deem acceptable.
📌 Risk Management:
A robust risk management strategy is fundamental to long-term success in forex trading. Incorporate the following risk management elements into your trade checklist:
▪️Determine Position Size: Calculate the appropriate position size based on your risk tolerance and account balance. Consider using tools such as position calculators or risk/reward ratio formulas.
▪️Set Stop Loss and Take Profit Levels: Define stop loss points to protect your capital from excessive losses and specify take profit levels to lock in profits once your target is reached.
📌Trade Execution:
Executing a trade swiftly and accurately is vital. Include the following checklist items to ensure consistent and disciplined execution:
▪️Double-check Parameters: Before placing a trade, review all the crucial parameters, including currency pairs, position size, entry and exit levels, and stop loss/take profit points.
▪️Timing Considerations: Be aware of upcoming economic releases, news events, or major market sessions that may impact your chosen currency pair, and adjust your trade execution timing accordingly.
💹Conclusion:
By incorporating a trade checklist into your forex trading routine, you can significantly enhance your decision-making process and overall trading performance. Remember to adapt your checklist to align with your personal trading style and preferences, continually evaluate its effectiveness, and make necessary improvements. Successful trading is a result of thorough planning, disciplined execution, and a continuous desire to learn and optimize your approach.
☺️I hope this post was helpful to some of our beginner traders😊
Dear followers, let me know, what topic interests you for new educational posts?
📖 STEP 5 to MASTER TRADING: Create a Checklist 📖
🟩 Checklist is the necessary and essential part of your trading plan 🟩
If you already have a trading plan - that’s really great. Now it’s time to take one step further and create a checklist. You will refer to it before each and every trade, and you’ll enter only if 100% of the checklist is present.
You can have different kinds of trading plan, it can have 5 or 50 pages - and it will describe your overall approach. Unfortunately, when it comes to executing your edge in the market, it’s very easy to bend your rules “just a little bit”, and all of a sudden you find yourself taking trade that is only a distant reminder of your actual trading setup.
Most traders will damage their account not because their strategy is bad but because they start to take random set up outside of their trading edge. Blowing the account usually doesn’t take more than several hours of emotional trading.
So that’s why it’s essential to have a short and clear checklist, usually up to 10 sentences usually that describes, point by point, what your trade entry looks like. You can even check every point before entering a trade (I do it). Of course, with time you’ll perfectly remember that checklist, but it’s also important to honestly follow it without checking every time, and the rule-following skill itself is a separate topic.
🟩 You're trading randomly if you don't have a checklist 🟩
Think about it. How many traders are constantly looking for “something else”, one more strategy. Instead of grinding deep into some specific concept, pattern or trading system, they will run to the next one with the first normal losses. They are running on the surfice for years instead of going deep to the core of trading - which, in my opinion, is the perfection of one strategy.
Sometimes they even find what they like and what starts to show some kind of results. But then some time passes, and after any kind of emotional stress (would it be euphoria after a winner or fear and anger after a loser), he can start to deviate from his rules. A beginner can be so emotional that he can enter random trades, one after another, in the course of a few hours, destroying a big part of his account.
There are a lot of other issues behind such inefficient behavior, however, a checklist is one of the first steps to handling it. Because if you don’t truly know what you’re looking for at the market, you’ll take the first trade you’ll find.
🟩 "Right or wrong" mentality is a fundamental flaw 🟩
You’re only right when you’re following your rules, and you’re only wrong when you take random setups. Again: even if you have a loser but you followed your setup - you're right, and even if you have crazy profit but it was a random trade - you're wrong, because this approach is not stable long-term.
Yes, traders do predict the price movements in a way, but only as a side effect of following their rules and executing their system. A trader will not be fixed on his predictions, and because he drew a box or a line, he will not expect the market to obey his colored drawings. A trader’s job is to take a setup based on his experience and testing, and he should let go of the expectations and his trade, managing on the way of course. This is a very deep question, in my opinion, and deserves a separate post later.
That’s why next time when you’ll see someone asking: “Should I buy or sell sir?”, you can surely tell the person is in the very beginning of his journey.
🟩 How to create a checklist? 🟩
Take a moment and describe in the short form how does your entry look like. What are your rules for Structure, Zones of interest, what is your entry confirmation, and what is your risk and management? I like to actually checkmark every point before each of my trades, so I’m sure I’m following my plan. Here’s an example of what my checklist looks like:
🎁Bonus for everyone still reading :) If you’re struggling with any discipline issues, ask yourself a question: “If I would receive a fully funded 100k account, for free, would I start to follow my rules and would I be more disciplined than I am now, and would I start “trading the right way” at last?” Try to be honest with yourself.
It may seem strange, but many novice traders think that something should happen before they will “really stick to their plan”. It could be “just one more good winner”, or “if only I had bigger capital”, or “when I finish this yet one more educational course’’ - and AFTER that I’ll do what I know I should be doing.
So, if your answer to that question is yes, then this is a clear indication you’re still in a very beginner mindset. Try to realize that ANY external change will not change the way you are. You need to change yourself FIRST, the way you behave in the markets and your mindset, and then everything external will follow.
Proper Preparation + Process = PROFITS!Happy Monday Traders!
In this video we go over exactly what you need to do daily to become a forex trading champion!
In short, to achieve success in forex day trading all you need to do is do what airplane pilots do... follow a check list, apply your process and have a destination!
See attached other valuable videos we have released that can help make you a better trader!
GBP USD forcast plus a checklist Sunday having a look at the markets and making a watchlist for the week ahead
important checklist I think you need to ask yourself before entering a trade, I still look at this before every trade to remind myself
I call it am I being a Twat checklist
1. Am I just taking a punt with this trade
2. Does this fit my trading plan, have I lost some trades on the bounce and now looking at time frames and different sets ups because I think mine is now sh**t
3. am I sticking to my max 2% risk per trade
4. am I revenge trading after a loss and now risking more than usual to make back profits
5 have you thought about stopping for the day after getting a big winner?
6. thinking of moving a stop loss to break even? would it really be a stop loss or giving your profits back?
hope you all have a good week trading peeps :)
Trading Entry and Exit ChecklistsSELF DEVELOPMENT/METHODOLOGY/PSYCHOLOGY
Trading Entry and Exit checklists
Over the past 18 years of trading, it has been a crucial step in my development to constantly critique myself and my trading strategy. I constantly monitor my performance on a daily, weekly,monthly,quartley and yearly timeframe. Listed below is a small simple example of some of the checklists that i have used in the past prior to entering and exiting a trade.
Entry Rules
1. Is the stop loss placed past the strongest support or resistance line?
2. Am i following my trading rules?
3. The risk/reward is acceptable
4. Have i double checked my entry/stop loss and target position?
5. No news announcements that will affect my trade?
6. Bid/ask spread - Is it in normal range for this pair, this session, this time?
7. AM i risking more then my agreed 1%?
8. Correlation - AM i trading against myself with already open trading trades?
Exit Rules
1. Has the market behaved as predicted? If so stay on track
2. Has the trade reached the support or resistance line?
3. Has the stop been placed too far away? or to close?
4. Am i exiting to early?
5. If unsure of trade exit immediately?
6. If i was impatient and entered trade exit immediately?
7. Is there an upcoming news event that will affect my trade?
8. Is the trade changing directions?
9. Don't take profits to early!! Are you exiting before your target line?
How has yours differed? is it similar?
A Checklist Rating System For TradingI have developed a trading system for myself that lets me know if a buy is good, or average so I can manage my risk. I have ranked what I believe to be the most important technical indicators
in addition to signals form the Ichimoku Cloud. A top score would be if it adds up to 35 - 46. You can play around with changing some of the numbers if the validity doesn't seem to add up for a trade.
See link below. Message me if you'd like to have the spreadsheet that will autofill and tell you if it's a high or low scoring buy according to these indicators. See link below for image.
tdmss.com
A Checklist Rating System For TradingI have developed a trading system for myself that lets me know if a buy is good, or average so I can manage my risk. I have ranked what I believe to be the most important technical indicators
in addition to signals form the Ichimoku Cloud. A top score would be if it adds up to 35 - 46. You can play around with changing some of the numbers if the validity doesn't seem to add up for a trade.
See link below. Message me if you'd like to have the spreadsheet that will autofill and tell you if it's a high or low scoring buy according to these indicators.
tdmss.com