A Dramatic Improvement in Trading! Return to the Origins
This time Investment Navigator+ has written “A Method to Dramatically Improve Your Trading! Returning to the Origin.” The content is priceless. It describes the experience of the flow to winning recaptured from the origin.
At the time, I didn’t think about the content of the article while practicing, but looking back, there was a solidbasis that it worked.
If you are wandering, I wrote this to help as many people as possible grasp a “winning path” through practical experience.
This content is the story of how, when I had wandered and grew a bit tired of trading, I obtained awinning trigger that became a turning point. And it is something I want to deliver to everyone who is still wondering, “how can I also win?”
Especially for small traders with surplus funds of 5 million yen or less, please give it a try.
Now, in the world of trading, there is an overwhelming amount of information. SNS, YouTube, GogoJungle… Every method seems right, but you don’t know which one suits you, and you end up getting lost. Before you know it, you’re studying all the time and lacking practical experience — I was exactly the same.
But one day, my way of thinking about trading changed. It was the seemingly modest and obvious things of “deliberate practice” and “capital allocation management.” Once I started applying these two, trading becamereproducible skill.
When you finish reading this book, you will feel
“There’s no need to rush. A path to winning really exists.”
And it would be wonderful if the knowledge that was once scattered becomes a single line. Your trading will begin to rise steadily from here. Please use this content to take that first step.
I wrote this with my left eye twitching, so please treat me to one Starbucks coffee (660 yen).
Also for free, there is a little more on methods, so even if you prefer to drink coffee yourself, please read up to midway. If there are any typos or parts you’ve forgotten, I’m sorry.
Chapter 1: Why do many people who are enthusiastic still not win?
Many who step into the world of trading think, “If it’s me, I should be able to win.” But reality is different. 99% of people lose their funds along the way and disappear from the market. There is a clear reason for this.
It is because,they do not treat trading as a job.
Every profession has steps of “learning,” “practicing,” “experience,” and “growth.” Just as a professional baseball player cannot become first-tier in a year, or a chef cannot be put in charge of a renowned restaurant in a few months, trading, too, should bea craftsman’s world.
Nevertheless, most people spend their time only trying to find a “winning method,” and do not know how to improve.how to improve.
The only way to win in trading, I think, is stillrepetition. No matter how much theory you study or how much you study indicators, unless you actually look at charts and move your hands, you won’t improve. Knowledge alone won’t make you able to win.
If a Major Leaguer teaches you how to swing a bat, can you hit a home run tomorrow? Everyone knows the answer. For those without accumulation, hitting a home run tomorrow is impossible, right?
Think back to your job. How many years did it take you to become proficient? How long did it take your junior colleagues or subordinates to become proficient?
Nobody starts perfectly. You fail, feel frustrated, think, and challenge again. It is through that repetition that the sense is finally learned. Trading is exactly the same.
However, in the market world, it often looks easy to earn money. So when you lose a little, you feel you lack talent and cannot continue. But in reality,you’re just lacking experience.
Many people are not “unable to win” but “not putting in enough practice.” The direction of study and effort is just off. No matter how much you study, in tradingthe real battle is everything. True understanding only comes within the charts.
If you really want to win, start by viewing trading as a job. Learn, research, practice, reflect, and practice again. The road to becoming a profitable trader lies in the mundane, repetitive process.
However, now through GogoJungle and social media, there is an environment where you can purchase or share the knowledge and logic that other traders have actually used.knowledge and logic. Used correctly, it can greatly shorten time and help prevent unnecessary losses.
Back then, I was in a monthly 20,000 yen school for two years, but after starting to use this method, I began to win in about three months.
Of course, every indicator or method has a compatibility with your life, funds, and past experiences, andfit plays a role.
At first it may feel a little difficult to fit, but the process of adjusting it to suit you is what will cultivate yourgenuine trading skill.
Chapter 2: A story of how capital management changed my life
When asked what truly helped me start winning in trading, I would answer without hesitation:“Changing capital management.”
In the beginning, I faithfully followed the common loss 1–3% rule. It sounds disciplined. Yet after about six months, my funds vanished and my spirit broke. (Before that, I had been trading sloppily for about three years.)
What I found and leaped forward with was,capital management by splitting 300,000 yen into 100 parts(1,000–3,000 yen per trade). I simply didn’t want to lose money, so I avoided draining funds, and since I had a sense of ease thinking “even if I lose 10,000 won per day in slots, I can manage,” I started trading with that mindset. I still loved trading, so I kept watching the charts frequently.
Back then, trading was quite rough in hindsight, with a mindset like “it’s 3,000 yen, so I don’t need a stop loss.” Lot size was 0.02, and a drawdown of about 10 dollars would trigger a stop. At first I traded somewhat casually, but then I began to think, “don’t get frustrated when you’re stopped out right after you enter,” and graduallyconsidered the relationship between stop loss width and entry position.
And what I realized was,.” As a result, practicing with small losses helped cultivate the ability to lose correctly. Repeating with a small unit of 3,000 yen allowed me to gain hundreds of hours of experience, and I began to see the relationships of entry position, stop loss width, and take-profit point gradually.
A particularly big discovery was“When trading on the 1-minute chart, reversal works near the higher-timeframe horizontal lines”. Entering on the 1-minute chart in reverse, aligned with support and resistance on the higher timeframes. Simple, but the reaction was remarkably good. And at that moment, the concept of “risk-reward” finally clicked for me.