Methods to dramatically improve at trading! Return to the origin
This time Investment Navigator+ has written “A Method That Dramatically Improves Trading! Return to the Origin.” The content is priceless. It describes the path to becoming profitable by returning to the origin.
Back then, when I was practicing, I didn’t think about the article’s content, but looking back, there was a solidbasis that made it work.
If you are feeling lost, I’ve compiled this content because I want as many people as possible to grasp a “winning path” through practical trading.
This content is the story of the moment I, who once wandered and grew a bit tired of trading, found awinning trigger. And it is information I want to share with everyone who is still wondering, “How can I become someone who wins?”
I especially want小小 investors with assets of 5 million yen or less to try this.
Now, in the trading world, there is an overwhelming amount of information. SNS, YouTube, GogoJungle… Each method may claim to be correct, but you don’t know which one suits you, and you end up lost. You study endlessly, yet you lack real-world experience — I was the same.
But one day, my entire approach to trading changed. It was the “repetition practice” and the “division of funds,” seemingly plain and obvious, that started me down a new path. Once I began implementing these two, trading becamereproducible skills.
After finishing this book, you’ll likely feel:
“There’s no need to rush. A path to winning does exist.”
And I hope, as your knowledge goes from scattered dots to a single line, your trading will begin to rise steadily. Take this content as your first step for an upward turn.
I wrote this with a twitch of the left eye, so please treat me to one Starbucks coffee (660 yen).
Also, for free, there’s a bit about some methods, so even if you prefer to drink coffee yourself, please read up to a point. If there are any typos or parts you forgot, I’m sorry.
Chapter 1: Why Do So Many People Care So Much but Fail to Win
Many people who step into the world of trading think, “I’ll win.” But reality is different. 99% of people lose their funds and disappear from the market. There is a clear reason for this.
That reason is,because they do not view trading as a job.
Every profession has steps of “learning,” “practice,” “experience,” and “growth.” Just as a professional baseball player won’t become top-tier in a year or a chef won’t be handed a famous restaurant after a few months, trading should fundamentally bea craftsman’s world.
Nevertheless, most people spend all their time looking for a “winning method” and do not learn theway to improve.
Is the only way to win in trading reallyrepetition? No matter how much theory you study or how many indicators you examine, you won’t improve unless you actually look at charts and act. Knowledge alone won’t make you win.
If a major leaguer teaches you how to swing a bat, can you hit a home run tomorrow? Everyone knows that’s impossible. For someone without accumulated practice, hitting a home run tomorrow is out of the question.
Think about your own work. How many years did it take you to become a professional? How long did junior colleagues or subordinates take to reach the same level?
Nobody is perfect from the start. You fail, feel frustrated, think, try again. With that repetition, the sense is finally built. Trading is exactly the same.
Yet in the market, it seems easy to make money. So when you lose a little, you feel you lack talent and can’t continue. But in reality,you simply lack experience.
Most people don’t fail due to lack of capability but due to insufficient practice. The direction of study and effort is off. No matter how much you study, in tradingreal-world trading is everything. True understanding only comes from the charts.
If you truly want to win, start by viewing trading as a job. Learn, research, practice, reflect, and practice again. The road to becoming a winning trader lies in the slow, dull repetition.
However, now through GogoJungle and social media, there is a environment where you can purchase and share the knowledge and logic that other traders have actually used. If used correctly, it can save a lot of time and help prevent unnecessary losses.
Back then, I joined a 20,000-yen-per-month school for two years, but when I started using this method, I began to win in about three months.
Of course, every indicator or method will interact with your life, your fund management, and your past experience in its own way.compatibility.
At first it may feel slightly hard to align, but the process of adapting it to fit you is what will cultivate yourgenuine trading skills.
Chapter 2: A Story Where Proper Money Management Changed My Life
If you’re asked what truly helped you win in trading, I would answer without hesitation:“Changing money management.”
In the beginning, I faithfully followed the popular 1–3% loss rule. It sounds planned, right? But after about half a year, my funds dwindled and my spirit broke. (Before that, for about three years, my trading had been a mess.)
What I found next and which propelled me forward was,money management by splitting 300,000 yen into 100 pieces(each trade 1,000–3,000 yen). I hated losing money, so I didn’t want to deplete funds, and since I was a bit tired, I thought, “If I lose around 10,000 yen in a day, I’ll be fine,” and started operating with that feeling. Still, I loved trading, so I kept a close eye on charts.
Back then, trading was quite rough. I thought, “It’s only 3,000 yen, so I don’t even need a stop loss.” Lot size was 0.02, and a 10-dollar adverse move would trigger a stop. I traded by feel at first, but gradually I began to consider therelationship between SL width and entry position.
Then I realized that“going short on a 1-minute chart tends to place me in positive territory quickly”. In the end, “practice of small losses” helped cultivate the ability to lose correctly. By repeating with a small unit of 3,000 yen, I gained hundreds of levels of experience, and the relationships between entry position, SL width, and take-profit points gradually became clear.
A particularly big discovery was“near the horizontal lines on higher-timeframes, 1-minute chart counter-trend works”. Entering on the 1-minute chart’s counter-trend in line with higher-timeframe support and resistance. It’s simple, but the response was astonishing. And it was then that the concept of “risk-reward” finally clicked for me.