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Only gamblers analyze the market; I only do "mindless execution robots"
Family members, who understands! There’s a strange phenomenon in the trading circle: some people make analyzing the market as complicated as solving a high school math problem, drawing support lines, counting wave patterns, and in the end, their accounts—losing worse than scoring zero on a math test!
1. “Analyzing the market = finding excuses for reckless trading”
Have you ever done this? Before the market opens, full of confidence “This wave will definitely go up,” then as soon as it drops, start self-PUA: “Ah, that MACD golden cross earlier was just a fake signal,” “The big players are shaking out the weak hands, I need to broaden my perspective”...
Basically, analyzing the market is just giving yourself psychological comfort for those “reckless trades,” what’s the difference from a gambler saying “Next time I’ll definitely win”?
2. “Market intuition? That’s an illusion of greed and fear”
Someone always brags “My market intuition is super accurate,” but what’s the result?
When it goes up, they think “I saw this coming,” when it drops, they blame “the market is unruly.”
Come on, market intuition is just the illusion in your brain of “greed wanting to make money” versus “fear of losing,” why should the market follow your feelings?
3. “Thinking during trading = betraying your trading plan”
Real trading masters don’t “think” during trading.
When building their trading system, they are like “Zhuge Liang,” thoroughly studying entry, stop-loss, and take-profit rules;
Once the market opens, they immediately become “mindless execution robots”—signals come, they enter; stop-loss triggers, they exit; no hesitation.
If you’re hesitating and pondering “Should I take this trade?” you’re essentially betraying your own trading plan, giving emotional trading an excuse.
4. “Don’t be a gambler, be a disciplined ‘robot’”
If you want to make money, remember:
• Don’t trade on “spur of the moment,” that’s a “fatal flaw” in trading;
• Don’t rely on “market intuition” to guess rises and falls, that’s a gambler’s “self-deception”;
• Quickly build your own trading system, become a “mindless execution” money-making machine!
Finally, I give everyone a trading motto: Those analyzing the market are gamblers; those executing rules are winners. Stop “falling in love” with the market, what we want is “profit results,” not the self-consolation of “analysis process.”