A Dramatic Improvement in Trading! Returning to the Basics
This time Investment Navigator+ has written “The Method to Dramatically Improve Trading! Return to the Origin.” The content is priceless. I, who has experienced the flow to winning written with a return to the origin.
At that time, when I was practicing, I didn’t think about the article’s content, but looking back, there was a basis for things going well.basisIf you are wandering, Iまとめd this content because I want as many people as possible to grasp the “winning path” through real practice.
This content is the story of how, after wandering and getting a bit tired of trading, I obtained a winning trigger, and it is something I want to deliver to everyone who is like me and continues to wonder, “How can I become a winner too?”
This content is something that someone who once wandered and grew tired of trading obtained. winning triggerwinning triggerThis became the turning point.
In particular, I would like small traders with capital of 5 million yen or less to try this.
Now, in the trading world, there is an overwhelming amount of information. Social media, YouTube, GogoJungle... Each method may sound correct, but you don’t know which one suits you, and you end up lost. Before you know it, you’re studying but lacking practical experience—this was exactly my situation too.
But one day, the way of thinking about trading itself changed. It was “repetitive practice” and “capital management by splitting,” which seem ordinary and unglamorous. From the moment I started practicing these two, trading becamereproducible skill.
When you finish reading this book, you will feel:
“There’s no need to rush. The path to victory does exist.”
And hopefully, the scattered pieces of knowledge will connect into a single line. Your trading will begin to rise steadily from now on. To take the first step, please use this content.
Because I wrote with a twitch of my left eye, please treat me to one cup of Starbucks coffee (660 yen).
Also for free, I have written a little about methods, so even if you prefer to drink coffee yourself, please read up to a portion. I apologize for any typos or fallen-out details.
Chapter 1: Why do many people who are enthusiastic still fail to win?
Many people who enter the world of trading think, “I can win.” But reality is different. 99% of people end up dissolving their funds partway 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 cannot become first-rate in one year, or a chef cannot be put in charge of a famous restaurant in a few months, trading is fundamentally acraftsman’s world, in my view.
Nevertheless, most people spend time only searching for a “winning method,” and they do not know how to improvehow to improve.
The only way to win in trading is probablyrepetition. No matter how much theory you study or how much you study indicators, you will not improve unless you actually look at the charts and move your hands. Knowledge alone will not make you able to win.
If a major league baseball player teaches you how to swing a bat, can you hit a home run tomorrow? Everyone understands that with no buildup, hitting a home run tomorrow is impossible, right?
Think back to your own work. How many years did it take you to become proficient? How long did your junior colleagues or subordinates take to reach a competent level?
No one started perfect. You fail, feel frustrated, think, and then challenge again. Through that cycle, your sense gradually develops. Trading is exactly the same.
Yet in the market world, it often seems “easy money is possible.” So when you lose a little, you feel you have no talent and cannot continue. But in reality,you simply lack experience.
Many people don’t fail because they can’t win; they fail because their practice amount is insufficient. The direction of study and effort is just off. No matter how much you study, in tradingpractice is everything. True understanding only comes from the charts.
If you truly want to win, start by treating trading as a job. Learn, research, practice, reflect, and practice again. The path to becoming a winning trader lies in a slow, boring repetition.
However, now through GogoJungle and social media, there is an environment where you can purchase and share knowledge and logicknowledge and logicthat other traders have actually used. Used correctly, it can save a lot of time and help prevent unnecessary losses.
Back then I was enrolled in a 20,000 yen per month 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 will have your life and capital management and prior experience influence your compatibilitycompatibility.
At first, it may feel a bit hard to adjust, but the process of shaping it to suit you is what will cultivate your genuine trading skillsgenuine trading skills.
Chapter 2: How capital management changed my life
If asked what truly helped me win, I would answer without hesitation.“Changing capital management.”
Initially, I faithfully followed the popular 1–3% loss rule. It sounds strategic, doesn’t it? But after about six months, my funds melted away and my spirit broke. (Before that, for about three years, my trading had been a mess.)
What I found and jumped on wascapital management by dividing 300,000 yen into 100 parts(1,000–3,000 yen per trade). I disliked losing money altogether, so I didn’t want to deplete funds, and given I had fewer funds, I thought, “Even if I lose 10,000 yen in a day at the casino, it won’t bother me.” That sense led me to start trading in that way. Still, I loved trading, so I kept watching the charts frequently.
Back then, my trading was quite rough, and I thought, “It’s 3,000 yen, so I don’t need a stop loss.” The lot size was 0.02, and if it moved against me by about $10, I would stop out. At first I traded vaguely, but the feeling of “don’t cut losses immediately after entering” pushed me to consider the relation betweenSL width and entry position.
Then I realized that“Reverse buying on a 1-minute chart yields a quick profit”. Ultimately, the practice of “losing small” helped me cultivate the power to lose correctly. By repeatedly trading with the small 3,000 yen unit, I gained hundreds of experiences, and gradually the relationships among entry position, SL width, and profit-taking points became visible.
A particularly big discovery was“Near the upper timeframe’s horizontal lines, 1-minute chart reversals work well”. Enter on a 1-minute reversal and follow the support and resistance on higher timeframes. It’s simple, but the response was astonishingly good. And that’s when the concept of “risk-reward” finally clicked for me.