Just been reading about Takashi Kotegawa again, and honestly his story is one of the most underrated lessons in retail trading. This guy literally became a legend in Japanese markets without any institutional backing, which is pretty wild when you think about it.



Kotegawa wasn't born into wealth or connected to the finance world. He started trading fresh out of university, totally self-taught, just by studying price action and chart patterns. But what really made him stand out wasn't just technical skill—it was his ability to stay ice cold when everyone else was panicking.

The 2005 Livedoor shock is the perfect example. While the whole market was freaking out over the scandal, Kotegawa was hunting for opportunities in the chaos. He made over 2 billion yen in just a few years, which at the time was roughly $20 million. That's not luck—that's pure execution.

Then there's the J-Com trade that basically cemented his status as a market genius. A Mizuho Securities trader fat-fingered a massive order—610,000 shares at 1 yen instead of 1 share at 610,000 yen. Most people would've missed it or hesitated. Takashi Kotegawa saw it, moved fast, grabbed the mispriced shares, and cashed out when the error got corrected. That's the kind of decisiveness that separates winners from everyone else.

What I find most interesting though is how Kotegawa lives off the market. Despite being massively wealthy, the guy uses public transit, eats at cheap restaurants, barely does interviews. He's basically invisible despite being one of the most successful retail traders ever. Zero ego, all focus.

His whole journey proves something important: in a game dominated by hedge funds and institutions, a single retail trader with discipline, sharp timing, and the ability to act decisively can absolutely compete. Kotegawa didn't need a Bloomberg terminal or a team of analysts. He just needed to understand the game better than everyone else in the room.
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