Smart Money Follower

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Smart Money Follower
feɪv(ə)rɪt ɪnˈvɛstə >>
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Joined Jan 2021

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每个散户都有自己的看法。 没有什么谁对谁错。 股票只有两个法则。。 第一 保住本金 风险管理第一;第二永远记住第一 法则。 ECA 大概率像半年前tunepro 。。。 base stage 盘整 range 0.14 -- 0.20 (通常都是基金和老板收票价位) base stage 没有人知道长达多久。。。。 美股差不多炒了半年robotic technology. ECA robotic arm 也会被撒尿一点吧 哈哈哈哈
8 hours · translate
资金池太小 也没有关系。 今天马股活跃股大概 20-25% . 200 档股票给你选 可研究。 美股昨晚大概 60% 活跃股 。。 6000多档股 。。那么多 看到你心乱。 所以马股比较集中 。。 day trade, momemtum trader 也集中。 比较容易。
技术分析。。。就拿 WARREN的 HEGROUP上半年 哪里有基本面?如果是技术面 已经可以 0.2X 买进。现赚一笔。。 然后 再看看基本面 有改善再选要不要拿住更久。 情况跟今天的ECA 一样 。。 技术面 改善 但 基本面 你会哭。 前两年有人问ECA可以买吗。。 我看现在可以一点一点 买进
9 hours · translate
马股虽然波动不高,但是洗盘的时间需要多1.5倍 ?? 你有玩过美股的penny 吗 。。 一个晚上可以起50%。。 隔天早盘还要亏10%。。。 马股就是这里好 。。洗盘可以慢慢给你想一下。 美股是没有。
10 hours · translate
马股赚钱比美股容易很多。虽然我没买马股 .. 因为同样的分析技术 在美股看对几率比较低。 但 马股看对几率比较高。 两个市场都是大同小异。 只美股变化 转势 比较频密。。 可以搞懂美股 马股就比较容易看。 美股是学习地方 。。马股是拿来赚钱地方
13 hours · translate
Adama 不需要那么大反应的 我这些kecil猫 哪里有说服力 哈哈哈

马股没有量? 0292 JTgroup 0328 3REN !! 起那么多 量那么多。 不是没有量 是你和我没买对罢了。

是的 马股是容易赚的钱 我还是需要跟 两位大神 学 -- warren 买 hegroup 0.20 和 另外一个(忘了是谁) 买DSONIC 0.23
最恐慌的时机 买进 想都不需要想 ALL IN....
2 days · translate
马股赚钱比美股容易很多。 波动不大 而且没有期权kacau. 加上马股做多反向做空也少。 哪里会难。
虽然我没买马股。 八月头看好MCLEAN 现在都起了100%, 九月看好 BIG 7005 . 现在都在半路向上。。 估计到年尾会靠近一块 或更高。
2 days · translate
INSIGHT 4: THEY BLEW UP. THEN BECAME MILLIONAIRES. Every trader has a scar. Some just wear it better. 

Before they became legends, the market broke them. Humbled them. 

Humiliated them. And in those  

moments—when their accounts were empty, and their  confidence shattered—they had to make a choice: 

Quit… or transform. Jack Schwager didn't just interview  

success stories. He interviewed survivors. And what he uncovered was a hidden pattern:  

nearly every "Market Wizard" had once blown up. Not just lost a little. 

Not just had a bad week. Full-blown devastation. 

One trader confessed to  losing $600,000 in a single  

afternoon—because he refused to cut a loser. Another got greedy, doubled down, and watched  

months of gains vanish in minutes. But none of them blamed the market. 

They blamed their mindset. Their  ego. Their illusion of control. 

And that's when something strange happened. Their real journey began. 

It wasn't the profits that made  them great. It was the pain. 

Because pain broke the fantasy.  It shattered the illusion that  

they were smarter, faster, invincible. And in the ashes of that collapse… they rebuilt. 

But this time, with humility. Bruce Kovner said it best:  

"The worst thing that can happen to a new  trader is to win big on their first trade." 

Because early success breeds delusion. But early failure? That builds character. 

Schwager's interviews are filled with traders  who only started taking risk management seriously  

after the market punched them in the gut. One blew up three times before creating  

strict stop-loss rules. Another kept a photo of his  

biggest losing day next to his screen—as  a reminder of what arrogance costs. 

You see, in trading, pain isn't  just feedback. It's curriculum. 

Every blown account is a lesson in disguise. And if you survive it, really survive it—not  

just financially, but mentally—you  don't come back as the same person. 

You come back reborn. It's what Joseph Campbell  

called "the dark night of the soul." In  mythology, the hero must descend into the  

underworld before he returns with the treasure. In trading, the underworld is your worst loss. 

Your panic. Your shame. 

But make no mistake—what separates the amateurs  from the masters… is who keeps walking. 

One trader told Schwager: "I  lost everything at 25. By 30,  

I was a millionaire. The difference? I stopped  fighting the market and started learning from it." 

Another said: "My worst day became my  best teacher. Now I keep that memory  

close—not to torture myself, but to  remind myself how far I've come." 

So if you've blown up before—good. That means you've started. 

The market has initiated you. Now the question is: will you run  

from the lesson, or rise into it? Because on the other side  

of that loss… is someone new. Someone who doesn't fear the market  

anymore—because they no longer fear themselves. And once you've faced that pain, you're ready  

to learn the most surprising skill  of all: how to lose like a winner.
3 months · translate
INSIGHT 3: THERE IS NO HOLY  GRAIL — ONLY PERSONAL EDGE 

Every losing trader has one thing in common:  they keep searching for the perfect system. 

They bounce from strategy to strategy. RSI this week. 

Fibonacci next week. Maybe some Wyckoff next month. 

And every time it fails, they  say the same thing: "It worked  

for someone else… so what's wrong with me?" But here's the twist—nothing's wrong with you. 

What's wrong… is the question. Because as Jack Schwager discovered  

after interviewing dozens of trading legends,  there is no one-size-fits-all strategy. 

These traders didn't follow the same  system. They didn't use the same indicators. 

Some were ultra-technical.  Others trusted gut feelings. 

Some scalped tick charts. Others  held positions for months. 

The only thing they shared… was self-knowledge. Take Mark Ritchie, a trend-following trader who  

turned $30,000 into millions by riding big moves  over time. He told Schwager: "The key is to find  

an approach that fits your personality." That's it. 

Not what works on paper. Not what backtests well. 

But what fits you—your psychology, your  pain tolerance, your emotional rhythm. 

Contrast that with Linda Raschke, who made her  fortune in fast-paced intraday trades. For her,  

long-term positions were psychological torture. Holding trades for weeks wasn't wrong—it was  

just wrong for her. See the pattern? 

The Holy Grail isn't a system. It's alignment. Alignment between who you are and how you trade. 

But that requires honesty.  And most people avoid that. 

Because it's easier to copy someone  than to confront your own wiring. 

Easier to follow a signal than to admit  your risk tolerance is paper-thin. 

Easier to blame a strategy than to ask,  "Am I even meant to trade this way?" 

Here's the metaphor Schwager  never said, but it's true: 

Trying to force someone else's system onto  your brain is like borrowing shoes two sizes  

too small and trying to run a marathon. Painful. Awkward. And guaranteed to fail. 

So what's the solution? Stop chasing what's "working right now." 

Start studying yourself. Journal your emotional triggers. 

Track your comfort zones. Notice when you feel flow—and when you feel panic. 

And then reverse-engineer  a strategy that fits that. 

Because the traders in The New Market Wizards  didn't win because their systems were better. 

They won because their systems  were tailored to their inner world. 

One trader put it perfectly: "I spent years  looking for the Holy Grail outside. Turns out  

it was inside me all along. I just had  to dig through a lot of BS to find it." 

So if you've been feeling like a failure for  not "getting it," here's your permission slip: 

You don't need to get someone else's system. You need to build one that fits your soul. 

But that takes time. And often, that process  begins not with success… but with pain.
3 months · translate
INSIGHT 2: WHY THE BEST TRADERS ARE COWARDS The best traders in the world… are cowards. 

They're not bold. They're not  reckless. They don't bet the farm. 

In fact, the higher the  stakes, the smaller they trade. 

It sounds backward, doesn't it? But in  Schwager's interviews, time and time again,  

this pattern emerged: the top traders didn't  win by being brave—they won by being afraid. 

Tony Saliba made $8 million from a $50,000  account trading options. But when Schwager  

asked him how he did it, his answer  wasn't about setups or volatility curves. 

It was about risk control so  obsessive, it bordered on paranoia. 

He would walk away from his screen mid-trade if  something felt off. He'd reduce position size  

after a win—just to guard against overconfidence. And if a trade ever started to "feel" too good?  

That was his cue to get out. Then there's Tom Baldwin,  

one of the largest bond traders in the world.  People expected him to be aggressive. He moved  

thousands of contracts in minutes. But beneath that surface  

was a mind wired for defense. He didn't chase wins. He anticipated danger. 

His size? Carefully calculated. His losses? Ruthlessly cut. 

Here's the paradox: amateurs think courage  means holding on. But professionals know  

real courage is letting go. Letting go of bad trades. 

Letting go of pride. Letting go of the need to be right. 

One trader told Schwager: "Every time I start  getting confident, I size down. I want to feel  

like I could lose, because that keeps me sharp." That's not cowardice. That's mastery. 

You see, most people enter the market  seeking reward. They're chasing thrill. 

But the pros? They're scanning for threat. That's what keeps them alive.  

That's why they last. It's like walking a tightrope  

over a canyon. The average trader looks at  the view. The great trader watches the wind. 

This mindset flips everything. A normal person feels good after  

a win—and bets bigger. A master feels suspicious  

after a win—and protects their capital. Because the real danger isn't loss. It's hubris. 

Here's a joke from the trading floor: "What's the  fastest way to make a small fortune trading? Start  

with a large fortune and no risk management." So if you've ever told yourself, "I need to  

take more risk to grow"—think again. What if you don't need more courage? 

What if you need more fear? What if the voice you're  

ignoring—the one that says, "slow down"…  is the one that turns you into a legend? 

Because in trading, bravery doesn't make you rich. Survival does. 

But what if I told you… even surviving isn't  enough—if you're trading someone else's system?
3 months · translate
INSIGHT 1: THE MARKET IS A MIRROR The market is not here to make you rich. 

It's not here to confirm your  predictions or reward your intelligence. 

The market has no opinion. No memory. No mercy. What it does have—every single  

second—is a perfect mirror. One that reflects everything inside you. Your  

hope. Your fear. Your desperation. Your arrogance. Most people never see it. They think  

they're analyzing price action, when in  reality, price action is analyzing them. 

Jack Schwager's interviews repeatedly return to  one idea: the people who make it in this game  

don't just know charts—they know themselves. They've studied their patterns.  

Their impulses. Their inner chaos. One trader said, "I realized I was chasing trades  

the same way I used to chase validation as a kid." Another confessed, "I was trying to beat the  

market the way I used to  try to impress my father." 

Think about that. How many of your  

trades are emotional reenactments? How often do you hold too long—because  

letting go would mean admitting you were wrong? How often do you size up—not because it's smart,  

but because you want to feel powerful? The market doesn't care about your feelings. 

But it will show them to you. And if you're paying attention,  

it becomes the greatest therapist  you've ever had. Because it never lies. 

You blow up an account?  That's not the market's fault. 

That's your unresolved impulse,  staring you in the face. 

One of Schwager's most powerful moments came when  a trader explained why he started journaling—not  

his trades, but his emotions during each one. Over time, he saw patterns. Not  

in the market—but in himself. Fear always showed up after three losses. 

Greed always kicked in when  he saw a friend post a gain. 

He learned to anticipate his inner signals  better than any technical indicator ever could. 

The real breakthrough came not from  prediction—but from observation. 

These traders didn't eliminate emotion.  They respected it. Studied it. Disarmed it. 

And when that happened, trading  became a performance—not a panic. 

Now ask yourself: what if every trade you make  is a test—not of strategy, but of self-awareness? 

What if your biggest edge isn't a new  system… but finally seeing what the market  

has been trying to show you all along? And if that idea resonates, just wait  

until you meet the trader who embraced fear so  deeply, it became the foundation of his empire…
3 months · translate
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