Tapiwa Andrew Wadi
4 min readDec 21, 2021

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40 Trading Enlightenments That Struck Me Over The Years

If you target less than 5 pips regularly, commissions and spread will eat your account balance.

You absolutely have to find a vent to release pressure and adrenaline – sports, drinking, painting, anything that helps.

If you can manage to find a mentor in which you believe, you will make it much faster.

Your trading style has to fit your personality and your lifestyle, or cognitive dissonance will get the better of you.

Meditation sucks, doesn’t work for me.

Don’t trade more than 4 hours per day, but those 4 hours with all the focus you can bring to the table.

Overtrading is your death.

Once you are comfortable missing a move, you will be able to trade profitably.

Not trading the news does not make sense at all – during news there is real liquidity and a real interest to push prices in one way or another. Let the market show its hand, then get in.

Let it turn, let price create structure, THEN get in, with the structure as protection in your back.

Don’t system hop, but adapt the system of your choosing to your needs.

Don’t trade overleveraged.

Yes, it is possible to turn a small account into a huge account, but don’t expect it to happen overnight, and don’t expect to be able to do it before your fifth (or so) year of trading.

Some are faster, some are slower, some will never get it.

Risk per trade is a function of the volatility of your strategy and your psychological ability to deal with swings in your equity.

Know exactly why you are trading, and what you want to achieve – which career path will be yours?

Daytrading is not easier than swingtrading or vice versa. They both simply require different skillsets, different abilities (yes, some people are just too slow for daytrading) and different preparation routines.

Trust your gut. Absolutely love the trade? Get in. Don’t love it? Just stay out.

No pain, no gain. Demo trading is ok, but don’t do it for too long. Risk micro amounts of money, get used to losing money. Because you will lose for the rest of your life if you want to be a trader. It’s part of the game. You “just” need to win more than you lose.

Listening to music while trading can be a good thing – just know yourself. If I listen to aggressive music in the car, I will push the pedal to the metal. The same happens when trading.

Have a trading journal and review, review, review
Work on your psychology, but don’t underestimate the power of knowledge. Fear stems from not knowing. Work hard, know more, be more confident. Most psychological issues will dissolve into thin air.

Yes, I said: don’t system hop. But for the first year or two, try out everything you can. Every market, every strategy, every trading style. How can you know what fits your personality if you don’t know what’s out there? Finally, decide and take the leap of faith.

Screen time alone won’t help you. Again: review. REVIEW! You need an effective feedback loop or you will repeat the same mistakes again, and again, and again. There is no learning by doing in trading.

You don’t need to be hyper intelligent to be a trader. The best traders I know are “simple” minds. They do what works, they have no ego, and they disregard what does not make sense to them.

Do not have monetary goals. Have process-oriented goals.

Do not look at your P&L during your trading session or you WILL trade your P&L. Before and after a trading session, the money in your account is money, yes. During the session, however, the money in your account is ammunition that has to be spent in order to acquire more ammunition, if that makes sense.

If you read only two books about trading, these should be Pitbull by Marty Schwartz and Diary Of A Professional Commodity Trader by Peter Brandt.

Trading with the trend is not easier than trading against the trend. Trading with the trend is the last thing I learned and every single trader I know seems to have the hardest time following a trend.

If you want to pay for education, do your research. It is very possible to differentiate the scammers from the real traders. If something sounds too good to be true, run as fast as you can.

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Tapiwa Andrew Wadi

Equity Analyst| Author| Prop Fund Manager| Advocate of Free Markets