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I've been watching this for a while now, and it's wild how the 90% failure rate in trading keeps proving itself over and over. You see people jumping in with these crazy dreams of financial freedom, but most of them end up totally burnt out with less money than they started with. The thing is, it's not random. There's actually a pretty clear pattern to why people fail, and if you understand it, you can avoid being part of that majority.
Here's what I've noticed: most traders treat this like it's some kind of get-rich-quick scheme instead of an actual skill. They see a pump on Twitter, catch some hype, and think they've figured it out. But trading is a profession. It requires study, strategy, and a solid foundation in things like risk management and market structure. Without that, you're basically going in blind.
The biggest account killer I see is people not respecting risk management. They'll throw way too much on a single trade or forget stop-losses entirely. One bad move and weeks of progress just disappears. The market doesn't care how confident you are. Even the best setups fail sometimes. The successful traders I know, the ones who actually make it, they follow something simple: never risk more than 1-2% per trade. Sounds boring, but that's literally the difference between staying in the game long enough to win versus blowing up.
Then there's the emotional side. Fear, greed, FOMO, they're everywhere. People panic-sell at the bottom, hold way too long chasing profits, or chase every single move trying to make back losses. This is where overtrading kills accounts faster than anything else. I've seen people take 20+ trades a day just because they couldn't sit still. That's not trading, that's just burning money with extra steps.
What separates the people who actually profit from everyone else isn't luck. When you look at top traders in the world who've built real careers, they all share something: they're disciplined. They educate themselves continuously, they stick to one tested strategy instead of jumping around, and they never let emotions override their system. They have a written plan, they follow it, and they track results over months, not days.
The patience thing is real too. Most people abandon their strategy after a few losing trades. They think if it doesn't work immediately, it's broken. But consistency is what separates professionals from amateurs. You commit to something, you master it, you give it real time to prove itself.
Honestly, the gap between the 90% and the 10% that actually wins isn't about market knowledge or some secret edge. It's about mindset and approach. The winners treat this as a long-term skill with strict rules. The losers treat it like a lottery. If you focus on education, capital preservation, real risk management, and emotional control, you're already ahead of most people. That's really the only difference.