P&L Management for Day Trading

Trading Psychology • Day Trading Risk Management The P&L Paradox: Why Profits Trigger Your Worst Trades Strong P&L management means the number on the screen does not get to manage you. This guide helps turn profit protection, loss aversion, and impulse control into a clear daily protocol you can actually follow. Video Takeaways Self-check Protocol … Read more

Trading Drawdown Recovery: Risk Management Protocol to Protect Your Account

Trading Psychology • Risk Management • Drawdown Recovery Surviving Trading Drawdowns: The Operator’s Manual (trading drawdown) A trading drawdown is where discipline stops being a slogan and starts becoming a survival tool. This guide gives a practical drawdown recovery protocol: daily loss limit, max drawdown rules, position sizing cuts, A+ only mode, and a calm … Read more

Anchoring Bias in Trading: Break the Entry-Price Magnet

Trading Psychology • Risk Management • Behavioral Finance Anchoring Bias in Trading: Stop Letting Entry Price Control Your Decisions Anchoring bias turns the entry price into a psychological magnet. This guide helps replace break-even thinking with invalidation-first risk management, structure-based decision-making, and cleaner trading discipline. Video Key takeaways Self-check Protocol FAQ Watch: how anchoring bias … Read more

Trading Psychology for Day Trading: Beat Ego, Confirmation Bias, and Trade With Discipline

Trading Psychology • Behavioral Finance • Decision Protocols Ego vs Edge: The Need-to-Be-Right Trap (trading psychology) A useful trading psychology framework for ego in trading, confirmation bias, and rule-breaking under pressure. Learn how the amygdala threat response distorts execution, why one ego-driven -5R mistake can erase disciplined gains, and how to replace opinion-defense with a … Read more

Gambler’s Fallacy Trading: Stop Revenge Trading and Protect Your Account

Trading Psychology • Behavioral Finance • Risk Management Gambler’s Fallacy in Trading: The Streak Trap That Blows Up Accounts The gambler’s fallacy makes traders believe the next win or loss is “due” after a streak. That illusion fuels revenge trading, bad position sizing, early profit-taking, and broken discipline. This guide shows how to spot it, … Read more