By Chen Kai (é™ˆå‡Æ)

Path to Trading — Complete Implementation Specification

Based on Chen Kai (é™ˆå‡Æ), Path to Trading (äŗ¤ę˜“ä¹‹č·Æ) (2019)


Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. The Five Stages of Trader Development
  3. Trading System Design — The Complete Framework
  4. Market Selection in China
  5. Technical Analysis Toolbox for A-Shares
  6. Trend Following Methodology
  7. Mean Reversion Strategies
  8. Multi-Timeframe Analysis
  9. Position Sizing and Money Management
  10. Risk Control Framework
  11. Trading Psychology and Emotional Management
  12. Backtesting and System Validation
  13. Trade Journaling
  14. Behavioral Discipline
  15. Common Mistakes
  16. Complete Trade Lifecycle Example
  17. Key Principles

1. Overview

1.1 The Central Thesis

Chen Kai's Path to Trading maps the complete journey from novice retail investor to professional, systematic trader. Unlike many Chinese trading books that focus on a single technique or secret indicator, Chen Kai argues that trading success emerges from the integration of five pillars: market understanding, a complete trading system, disciplined risk management, psychological maturity, and continuous self-improvement. No single pillar is sufficient on its own; omitting any one of them will eventually destroy a trader's account.

The book is grounded in the reality of Chinese markets — the T+1 settlement rule for A-shares, the 10% daily price limit (涨跌停), the dominance of retail investors, the unique behavior of Chinese futures markets, and the regulatory environment that shapes how strategies must be adapted from Western textbooks.

1.2 Who This Book Is For

Chen Kai writes for three audiences:

1.3 The Core Philosophy

Trading is not about prediction; it is about probability and process. The market will always do unpredictable things. The trader's job is not to be right about direction, but to construct a system where being right yields significantly more than being wrong costs, and then to execute that system with absolute consistency.

Chen Kai emphasizes repeatedly: äŗ¤ę˜“ę˜Æäø€åœŗäæ®č”Œ — "Trading is a practice of self-cultivation." Technical skill accounts for perhaps 30% of long-term success. The remaining 70% is psychological discipline, emotional management, and the ability to follow rules when every instinct screams to deviate.


2. The Five Stages of Trader Development

2.1 Stage One — Unconscious Incompetence (ę— ę„čÆ†ēš„ę— čƒ½)

The beginner does not know what they do not know. Characteristics include:

2.2 Stage Two — Conscious Incompetence (ęœ‰ę„čÆ†ēš„ę— čƒ½)

After significant losses (often 30-50% of capital), the trader realizes something is fundamentally wrong. Characteristics include:

2.3 Stage Three — The Aha Moment (é”æę‚Ÿę—¶åˆ»)

The trader has a breakthrough realization — usually not about a technique, but about the nature of the game. Common realizations include:

2.4 Stage Four — Conscious Competence (ęœ‰ę„čÆ†ēš„ęœ‰čƒ½)

The trader has a working system and understands why it works. Challenges at this stage:

2.5 Stage Five — Unconscious Competence (ę— ę„čÆ†ēš„ęœ‰čƒ½)

Execution becomes automatic. The trader no longer debates whether to follow the system; doing so is as natural as breathing. Characteristics include:


3. Trading System Design — The Complete Framework

3.1 The Six Components

Chen Kai defines a complete trading system as one that answers six questions with absolute specificity. A system missing any one of these is incomplete and will fail under stress.

Component Question It Answers Example
Market Selection (å“ē§é€‰ę‹©) What do I trade? CSI 300 components with average daily volume > 50M RMB
Direction Bias (ę–¹å‘åˆ¤ę–­) Am I looking for longs, shorts, or both? Long only in uptrending markets (MA20 > MA60 on weekly)
Entry Signal (å…„åœŗäæ”å·) When exactly do I enter? Price breaks above 20-day high on daily close with volume > 1.5x avg
Exit Signal (å‡ŗåœŗäæ”å·) When exactly do I exit — both for profit and loss? Stop-loss: 2x ATR below entry. Profit target: trailing stop at 3x ATR
Position Sizing (ä»“ä½ē®”ē†) How much do I risk on this trade? Risk 1% of account equity per trade
Trade Management (äŗ¤ę˜“ē®”ē†) How do I handle the trade between entry and exit? Add to winners at 1R profit; never average down

3.2 The Hierarchy of Importance

Chen Kai ranks the components in order of their contribution to long-term profitability:

  1. Position Sizing (40% of outcome) — Even a mediocre system becomes profitable with excellent money management; even a great system can destroy an account with poor sizing.
  2. Exit Strategy (25% of outcome) — How you exit determines whether you capture trends or give back all gains.
  3. Entry Signal (15% of outcome) — Important but less so than most beginners think.
  4. Direction Bias (10% of outcome) — Trading with the prevailing trend provides an inherent edge.
  5. Market Selection (5% of outcome) — Some instruments are structurally better suited to certain strategies.
  6. Trade Management (5% of outcome) — Adding to winners, scaling out, and adjustment rules.

3.3 System Coherence

Every component must be philosophically consistent. A trend-following entry paired with a mean-reversion exit will produce confusion and inconsistency. Chen Kai provides this coherence test:

Mixing elements from both philosophies is the single most common reason trading systems fail.


4. Market Selection in China

4.1 A-Share Stocks (Ač‚”)

Structural characteristics:

Implications for system design:

4.2 Chinese Futures (期蓧)

Structural characteristics:

Implications for system design:

4.3 Options (ꜟꝃ)

Structural characteristics:

Implications for system design:

4.4 Chen Kai's Recommendation

For beginners: Start with A-share stocks. The T+1 constraint actually helps by preventing impulsive intraday trading. The daily price limit caps maximum single-day loss. Move to futures only after achieving consistent profitability in stocks for at least one year.


5. Technical Analysis Toolbox for A-Shares

5.1 Moving Averages (å‡ēŗæē³»ē»Ÿ)

Chen Kai considers moving averages the most important technical tool because they are objective, unambiguous, and directly represent what matters: the average price paid by market participants over a given period.

Key moving averages for A-shares:

MA Period Function Common Chinese Term
5-day Very short-term trend, aggressive timing 攻击线 (Attack Line)
10-day Short-term trend ę“ē›˜ēŗæ (Trading Line)
20-day Intermediate trend č¾…åŠ©ēŗæ (Support Line)
60-day Medium-term trend, institutional reference ē”Ÿå‘½ēŗæ (Lifeline)
120-day Semi-annual trend, bull/bear divide 决策线 (Decision Line)
250-day Annual trend, long-term direction č¶‹åŠæēŗæ (Trend Line)

MA-based signals:

A-share specific adaptation: The 60-day MA is the most watched institutional reference line. Stocks trading above their 60-day MA are in "bull territory"; those below are in "bear territory." This line frequently acts as support during uptrends and resistance during downtrends because institutional algorithms reference it.

5.2 MACD (ęŒ‡ę•°å¹³ę»‘å¼‚åŒē§»åŠØå¹³å‡ēŗæ)

Standard settings: MACD(12, 26, 9).

Key signals in the A-share context:

5.3 RSI (ē›øåÆ¹å¼ŗå¼±ęŒ‡ę ‡)

Standard settings: RSI(14) for daily charts, RSI(6) for short-term.

Chen Kai's RSI framework for A-shares:

5.4 Bollinger Bands (åøƒęž—åø¦)

Standard settings: BB(20, 2).

Application to A-shares:

5.5 Combining Indicators — Less Is More

Chen Kai's critical rule: Never use more than three indicators simultaneously. The purpose of indicators is to filter noise, not to add it. His recommended combinations:


6. Trend Following Methodology

6.1 Core Principle

Trend following in Chen Kai's framework is based on a simple observation: Markets spend roughly 30% of the time in strong trends and 70% in choppy, trendless ranges. The trend follower accepts losses during the 70% in exchange for capturing large moves during the 30%.

6.2 Trend Identification

A trend is defined objectively using two criteria:

  1. Price structure: Higher highs and higher lows (uptrend) or lower highs and lower lows (downtrend).
  2. Moving average alignment: MA5 > MA20 > MA60 (bullish); MA5 < MA20 < MA60 (bearish).

Both conditions must be met. A market that shows higher highs but has tangled moving averages is not yet in a confirmed trend.

6.3 Entry Rules for Trend Following

Primary entry — Breakout (ēŖē “å…„åœŗ):

Secondary entry — Pullback (å›žč°ƒå…„åœŗ):

6.4 Exit Rules for Trend Following

Stop-loss (ę­¢ęŸ):

Trailing stop (ē§»åŠØę­¢ęŸ):

Profit target (ę­¢ē›ˆ):

6.5 A-Share Specific Considerations


7. Mean Reversion Strategies

7.1 Core Principle

Mean reversion is the complementary strategy to trend following. It exploits the observation that prices, after deviating significantly from their average, tend to snap back toward that average.

7.2 When to Use Mean Reversion

Chen Kai explicitly warns: Do not attempt mean reversion in a strong trend. Fading a trend is the fastest way to destroy capital.

7.3 Entry Rules for Mean Reversion

Buy setup (åšå¤šę”ä»¶):

  1. Price touches or drops below the lower Bollinger Band (20, 2).
  2. RSI(14) drops below 30 (or RSI(6) drops below 20).
  3. A bullish candlestick reversal pattern forms: hammer, bullish engulfing, or morning star.
  4. Volume on the reversal candle is at least 1.2x the prior candle (shows buyers stepping in).
  5. The stock is above its 250-day MA (only buy oversold stocks in a structural uptrend — avoid "catching falling knives" in genuine downtrends).

Sell setup (åšē©ŗę”ä»¶, for futures or for exiting long positions):

  1. Price touches or exceeds the upper Bollinger Band (20, 2).
  2. RSI(14) rises above 70 (or RSI(6) rises above 80).
  3. A bearish reversal candlestick pattern forms: shooting star, bearish engulfing, or evening star.
  4. Volume expansion on the reversal candle.

7.4 Exit Rules for Mean Reversion


8. Multi-Timeframe Analysis

8.1 The Three-Screen Method (äø‰é‡čæ‡ę»¤)

Adapted from Alexander Elder's concept, Chen Kai applies a three-timeframe approach to A-share trading:

Screen Timeframe Purpose Tool
Screen 1 (Strategic) Weekly Determine the primary trend direction MA60, MACD zero-line
Screen 2 (Tactical) Daily Identify the setup and confirm conditions Bollinger Bands, RSI, Volume
Screen 3 (Execution) 60-minute Time the precise entry and exit Price action, MA5/MA10 crossover

8.2 Rules of Engagement

8.3 Timeframe Alignment

The most profitable trades occur when all three timeframes agree. Chen Kai calls this å…±ęŒÆ (resonance):

When timeframes conflict (e.g., weekly bullish but daily bearish), the correct action is to wait. Forcing a trade in ambiguous conditions violates the principle of trading only when conditions are clear.


9. Position Sizing and Money Management

9.1 The Foundation of Survival

Chen Kai calls position sizing "the most important and most ignored aspect of trading." A system with a 60% win rate and a 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio can still destroy an account if each trade risks 20% of capital. Conversely, a system with a 40% win rate can compound wealth steadily if each trade risks only 1%.

9.2 The Fixed Fractional Method (å›ŗå®šęÆ”ä¾‹ę³•)

Core rule: Risk a fixed percentage of current account equity on every trade.

Position Size = (Account Equity x Risk Percentage) / (Entry Price - Stop Price)

Recommended risk percentages:

Trader Level Risk Per Trade Max Concurrent Risk
Beginner 0.5% 3% total
Intermediate 1.0% 6% total
Advanced 2.0% 10% total

Example: Account equity = 500,000 RMB. Risk per trade = 1% = 5,000 RMB. Entry price = 25.00. Stop price = 23.50. Risk per share = 1.50. Position size = 5,000 / 1.50 = 3,333 shares. Round to nearest lot (100 shares in A-shares) = 3,300 shares. Capital required = 3,300 x 25.00 = 82,500 RMB.

9.3 The Kelly Criterion (å‡Æåˆ©å…¬å¼) — Theory vs. Practice

The Kelly formula for optimal bet sizing:

f = (bp - q) / b

Where f = fraction of capital, b = win/loss ratio, p = probability of winning, q = probability of losing.

Chen Kai explains that full Kelly is far too aggressive for real trading. He recommends quarter-Kelly or half-Kelly to account for:

9.4 Scaling In and Scaling Out

Adding to winners (加仓):

Scaling out (åˆ†ę‰¹å‡ŗåœŗ):

9.5 Correlation-Adjusted Sizing

Never hold more than 3 highly correlated positions simultaneously. Chinese bank stocks (e.g., ICBC, CCB, BOC, ABC) move in near-lockstep. Holding 4 bank stocks at 1% risk each is not 4% risk — it is effectively a single 4% bet on the banking sector.


10. Risk Control Framework

10.1 The Three Levels of Risk

Level Scope Max Loss Action When Breached
Trade Risk Single position 1-2% of equity Automatic stop-loss execution
Daily Risk All trades in one day 3% of equity Stop trading for the day
Drawdown Risk Rolling peak-to-trough 15% of peak equity Reduce position size by 50%; at 20%, stop trading for 2 weeks

10.2 The Circuit Breaker Protocol

When account drawdown reaches 10%, implement the following:

  1. Reduce position sizing by 50%. If normally risking 1% per trade, reduce to 0.5%.
  2. Reduce maximum concurrent positions by 50%. If normally holding 5 positions, reduce to 2-3.
  3. Require all trades to pass an additional filter. The weekly trend must be confirmed bullish (not just daily) before entering any new trade.

When account drawdown reaches 15%:

  1. Close all positions.
  2. Stop trading for a minimum of 5 trading days.
  3. Review the trade journal to identify whether the drawdown is systemic (the market environment has changed) or behavioral (the trader is deviating from the system).

When account drawdown reaches 20%:

  1. Stop trading for a minimum of 2 weeks.
  2. Paper trade the system to confirm it still works before returning.
  3. When returning, start at 25% of normal position size and gradually scale back up.

10.3 Gap Risk Management for A-Shares

Because A-shares are subject to T+1, a trader cannot exit a position on the same day it was entered. This creates unique overnight gap risk. Mitigation strategies:


11. Trading Psychology and Emotional Management

11.1 The Emotional Cycle of Trading

Chen Kai describes a recurring emotional cycle that every trader experiences:

Excitement (new trade) → Anxiety (drawdown) → Fear (stop hit) →
Frustration (consecutive losses) → Revenge (oversize next trade) →
Denial (remove stops) → Capitulation (panic sell) → Depression →
Determination (study more) → Calm (new system) → Excitement (new trade) → ...

Breaking this cycle requires awareness, journaling, and rules that override emotion.

11.2 The Four Emotional Enemies

Fear (ꁐꃧ):

Greed (蓪婪):

Hope (åøŒęœ›):

Regret (åŽę‚”):

11.3 Developing Emotional Detachment

Chen Kai's practical recommendations:

  1. Trade small enough that you do not care. If a loss causes emotional disturbance, the position is too large.
  2. Track emotions in the trade journal. Record your emotional state at entry, during the trade, and at exit. Over time, patterns emerge.
  3. Pre-commit to decisions. Write down your plan before the market opens. During trading hours, execute the plan — do not make new decisions.
  4. Physical practice. Exercise, meditation, and adequate sleep directly improve trading performance by reducing emotional reactivity.
  5. Take breaks. After every 20 consecutive trading days, take 2-3 days off. After every drawdown exceeding 10%, take at least 5 days off.

12. Backtesting and System Validation

12.1 Why Backtest?

Backtesting serves one purpose: to determine whether a system has a genuine statistical edge or whether past profits were due to luck. A system that has not been backtested on a statistically significant sample is a gamble, not a strategy.

12.2 Backtesting Requirements

12.3 Key Metrics to Evaluate

Metric Acceptable Range Ideal Range
Win Rate > 35% (trend) / > 55% (reversion) > 45% (trend) / > 65% (reversion)
Profit Factor > 1.5 > 2.0
Average Win / Average Loss > 2.0 (trend) / > 0.8 (reversion) > 3.0 (trend) / > 1.2 (reversion)
Maximum Drawdown < 25% < 15%
Sharpe Ratio (annualized) > 0.8 > 1.5
Number of Consecutive Losses < 10 < 7
Recovery Factor (net profit / max DD) > 3.0 > 5.0

12.4 Avoiding Overfitting (čæ‡åŗ¦ę‹Ÿåˆ)

Overfitting is the greatest danger in backtesting. Chen Kai's rules:

  1. Parameter robustness test: The system should be profitable across a range of parameter values, not just one "optimized" setting. If MA(20) works but MA(18) and MA(22) fail, the system is overfit.
  2. Out-of-sample testing: Divide data into two halves. Optimize on the first half, test on the second. If performance degrades dramatically, the system is overfit.
  3. Walk-forward analysis: Continuously re-optimize on a rolling window and test on the next period. This simulates real-time trading more accurately.
  4. Fewer parameters: Every additional parameter is an opportunity to overfit. A system with 2-3 parameters is almost always more robust than one with 8-10.
  5. Logic before data: The system should be based on a sound market principle (trend persistence, mean reversion, etc.), not on a data-mined anomaly.

13. Trade Journaling

13.1 Why Journal?

The trade journal is the trader's mirror. Without it, self-assessment is based on memory, which is selective and biased. Traders remember their best and worst trades but forget the mediocre majority that determines long-term results.

13.2 What to Record

Per-trade data:

Field Example
Date/Time 2019-03-15 14:45
Instrument 600519 (Kweichow Moutai)
Direction Long
Entry Price 780.00
Stop-Loss 748.00
Target Trailing stop at 20-day MA
Position Size 200 shares
Capital Risked 6,400 RMB (0.8% of equity)
Rationale Weekly uptrend, daily pullback to MA20, RSI bounced from 45
Emotional State at Entry Calm, confident in setup
Exit Price 825.00
Exit Date 2019-04-02
Profit/Loss +9,000 RMB (+1.12R)
Lessons Held through initial drawdown; system worked as designed

Weekly review: Summarize win/loss statistics, largest winner, largest loser, any rule violations, emotional patterns observed.

Monthly review: Calculate running Sharpe ratio, drawdown, profit factor. Compare actual performance to backtest expectations. Identify whether any environmental shift (market regime change) has affected performance.

13.3 How to Use the Journal


14. Behavioral Discipline

14.1 The 10 Rules of Discipline

  1. Never enter a trade without a predetermined stop-loss. No exceptions.
  2. Never move a stop-loss further from the entry. You may tighten it, never widen it.
  3. Never add to a losing position. Averaging down is the fastest path to account destruction.
  4. Never risk more than 2% of account equity on a single trade.
  5. Never hold more than 5 uncorrelated positions simultaneously (for an account under 1 million RMB).
  6. Always execute the system's signals. Skipping signals because of fear or discretion destroys the statistical edge.
  7. Never trade to recover losses. Revenge trading compounds drawdowns.
  8. Review the trade journal weekly. Consistency in review produces consistency in execution.
  9. Take a break after 3 consecutive stop-losses. Do not trade the next day. Review the journal to determine if the losses are normal variance or a sign of a market regime change.
  10. Accept that losing trades are a cost of doing business. A 45% win rate means 55 losses per 100 trades. Each loss is an investment in the statistical edge, not a failure.

14.2 Pre-Market Routine

Chen Kai prescribes a specific pre-market routine:

  1. Review overnight news and global markets (15 minutes): U.S. markets, Hong Kong pre-market, commodity prices, policy announcements.
  2. Check existing positions (10 minutes): Are any stops likely to be hit at the open? Any positions approaching targets?
  3. Scan for new setups (20 minutes): Run screens for stocks meeting entry criteria. Prepare a watchlist of no more than 5 candidates.
  4. Write the plan (10 minutes): For each candidate, write: Entry price, stop-loss, position size, target. For existing positions, write: Adjustment levels or exit conditions for today.
  5. Wait for the open (5 minutes): No action in the first 15 minutes of trading (9:30-9:45). The opening auction creates artificial volatility.

15. Common Mistakes

15.1 The Thirteen Deadly Errors

# Mistake Why It Kills
1 No stop-loss A single catastrophic loss can erase months of gains
2 Averaging down Throwing good money after bad; the position grows as the thesis deteriorates
3 Oversizing Even a correct trade can cause devastating drawdown if too large
4 Trading without a plan Every decision becomes emotional when there is no predetermined framework
5 System hopping Abandoning a valid system during a normal drawdown; never allowing an edge to manifest
6 Indicator overload More indicators create more contradictions, leading to paralysis or cherry-picking
7 Ignoring the trend Buying "cheap" stocks in downtrends; shorting "expensive" stocks in uptrends
8 Chasing limit-up (追涨停) Buying stocks at the 10% daily limit hoping for continuation; high risk, illiquid exit
9 Full-position trading (ę»”ä»“ę“ä½œ) Putting 100% of capital in one trade or one sector; no margin of safety
10 Trading on tips Other people's analysis is not your edge; you will not know when they change their mind
11 Ignoring transaction costs Frequent trading in A-shares (stamp duty + commission) erodes returns rapidly
12 Neglecting the macro environment Trading individual stocks without awareness of market-wide conditions (e.g., PBOC tightening)
13 Refusing to take time off Burnout degrades decision quality; taking breaks is a risk management tool

16. Complete Trade Lifecycle Example

16.1 Setup: Long Trade in A-Share Market

Date: Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Instrument: 000858 (Wuliangye, 五粮液)

Account equity: 800,000 RMB. Risk per trade: 1% = 8,000 RMB.

16.2 Screen 1 — Weekly Analysis

16.3 Screen 2 — Daily Analysis

16.4 Screen 3 — 60-Minute Execution

16.5 Entry Calculation

16.6 Trade Management

16.7 Result Summary

Metric Value
Total Profit 27,480 RMB
Return on Capital Risked 27,480 / 8,000 = 3.44R
Holding Period 18 trading days
Max Adverse Excursion -1,080 RMB (Day 1 intraday low at 72.90)
Max Favorable Excursion +40,680 RMB (at peak 84.50)
Capture Ratio 27,480 / 40,680 = 67.5% of the move

18. Key Principles

18.1 On System Design

  1. "A complete trading system must answer six questions: What to trade, which direction, when to enter, when to exit, how much to risk, and how to manage the trade. If any answer is missing, the system is incomplete."

  2. "Position sizing is not an afterthought — it is the single most important component of any trading system. Most traders spend 90% of their time on entries and 10% on everything else. The ratio should be reversed."

  3. "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication in trading. A three-indicator system that you understand completely will always outperform a ten-indicator system that you only partially understand."

  4. "System coherence matters more than system complexity. Every component must share the same philosophical foundation — trend-following or mean-reversion, not a confused mixture of both."

18.2 On Risk Management

  1. "The first rule of trading is not to make money — it is to not lose money. Survival is the prerequisite for all future profits."

  2. "If you cannot quantify the risk of a trade before you enter it, you have no business taking it. Risk first, reward second — always."

  3. "A 50% loss requires a 100% gain to recover. A 20% loss requires only a 25% gain. This asymmetry is the mathematical reason why protecting capital is more important than growing it."

  4. "Circuit breakers are not signs of weakness — they are signs of professionalism. The ability to stop trading when conditions deteriorate separates survivors from casualties."

18.3 On Psychology

  1. "Trading is 30% technique and 70% psychology. You can give two traders the same system with a proven edge, and one will make money while the other loses. The difference is entirely in execution discipline."

  2. "The market is a mirror. It reflects your fears, your greed, your impatience, and your ego back at you — and charges you money for each reflection."

  3. "The greatest enemy in trading is not the market, not other traders, not even bad luck. It is your own inability to follow rules that you yourself created."

  4. "Boredom is the hallmark of professional trading. If trading is exciting, you are doing it wrong."

18.4 On the Journey

  1. "Every professional trader has a graveyard of blown accounts in their past. The difference between them and those who quit is that they treated each failure as tuition, not as a verdict."

  2. "There are no shortcuts on the path to trading mastery. The five stages cannot be skipped. You must earn each transition through real experience, real losses, and real self-examination."

  3. "Trading is ultimately a practice of self-cultivation (修蔌). The market will not change for you. You must change for the market. This process of change — of learning to control fear, greed, and ego — is the real path of trading."

  4. "The goal is not to become a trader who never loses. The goal is to become a trader who loses correctly — small, planned, and without emotional disruption."

18.5 On A-Share Markets Specifically

  1. "The T+1 rule is not a handicap — it is a gift. It forces you to think before you act, to commit to your analysis, and to avoid the noise of intraday fluctuations."

  2. "In a market dominated by retail investors, the trend-following edge is stronger than in institutional markets. Retail herding creates trends that are more persistent and more extreme than efficient market theory predicts."

  3. "The most dangerous moment in A-shares is when everyone around you is making money. That is when discipline matters most, because it is when the temptation to abandon your system and chase momentum is strongest."

  4. "Learn one market deeply before attempting to trade multiple markets. Master A-shares, then consider futures. Master futures, then consider options. Breadth without depth is a recipe for losses across multiple instruments."


End of implementation specification.