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Many traders have experienced this: the more they trade, the faster they lose money. Where does the problem lie? Frankly, the vast majority of people's efforts are actually emotional efforts.
They spend every day glued to the candlestick chart, afraid of missing any market movement. It seems like they are trading seriously, but in reality, they are just being led by every wave of market ups and downs. Blindly predicting, frequently entering and exiting trades, unable to stop wanting to buy the dip or sell the top—these are typical signs of emotional trading.
People who consistently make stable profits play completely differently. They don't try to predict the trend, nor do they engage in constant tinkering. Instead, they focus their energy on one thing: developing trend thinking.
The three core points of trend thinking are:
First, learn to distinguish between trending and consolidating markets; don't get cut during sideways movements.
Second, give up the pursuit of precise predictions. The market is never perfect; accepting ambiguity allows you to live more comfortably.
Third, execute strictly—only trade breakouts, only position at pullbacks, only add to positions when the trend is confirmed.
Practical advice is simple: focus on the 4-hour and daily charts, stay away from the noise of 1-minute and 5-minute charts. The benefits are obvious: trading frequency drops significantly, emotional interference naturally decreases, and win rate actually improves.
Looking back, the problem has never been that you are not working hard enough, but that you are working hard in the wrong direction.