- Apr 24, 2020
- 143
- 57
- 28
- 51
- LOCATION
- Owerri
- Samuelkelechiasugha
- Kasugha
- YOUTUBE
- Kasugha
- GOOGLEPLUS
- Kasugha
New week. New trades. Same question: Are you positioned or just hoping?
Last week is gone. The profits, the mistakes, the missed entries—it’s all history now. What matters is how you step into this new week.
This is where smart investors reset.
Look back, but don’t carry emotions forward—carry lessons.
Stocks that held strong:
These are your clues. When the market was shaky but certain stocks refused to drop, that’s not luck—that’s strength.
For example, if a bank stock keeps holding its price despite sell pressure, it tells you institutions may be quietly accumulating. Strength like that often leads the next move.
Stocks that showed weakness:
Some stocks don’t need news to fall—they just lack demand.
If a stock kept dipping even on “good days,” that’s a signal. Either profit-taking is happening, or confidence is low. Don’t ignore weakness—it’s just as important as strength.
Missed opportunities:
Be honest here.
That stock you said “I’ll enter later” and it ran 15%… that’s not bad luck—that’s hesitation.
The goal is not to regret it, but to understand why you missed it:
No plan?
Waiting for perfect price?
Fear of losing?
Because this week, similar setups will come again.
The market is always offering opportunities—but only to those prepared to act.
This week is not about chasing what already moved.
It’s about identifying what is about to move.
So before the opening bell:
Review your watchlist
Define your entry points
Know your exit plan
No guessing. No rushing. No emotional trading.
This week, we trade with clarity—not vibes.
Last week is gone. The profits, the mistakes, the missed entries—it’s all history now. What matters is how you step into this new week.
This is where smart investors reset.
Look back, but don’t carry emotions forward—carry lessons.
Stocks that held strong:
These are your clues. When the market was shaky but certain stocks refused to drop, that’s not luck—that’s strength.
For example, if a bank stock keeps holding its price despite sell pressure, it tells you institutions may be quietly accumulating. Strength like that often leads the next move.
Stocks that showed weakness:
Some stocks don’t need news to fall—they just lack demand.
If a stock kept dipping even on “good days,” that’s a signal. Either profit-taking is happening, or confidence is low. Don’t ignore weakness—it’s just as important as strength.
Missed opportunities:
Be honest here.
That stock you said “I’ll enter later” and it ran 15%… that’s not bad luck—that’s hesitation.
The goal is not to regret it, but to understand why you missed it:
No plan?
Waiting for perfect price?
Fear of losing?
Because this week, similar setups will come again.
The market is always offering opportunities—but only to those prepared to act.
This week is not about chasing what already moved.
It’s about identifying what is about to move.
So before the opening bell:
Review your watchlist
Define your entry points
Know your exit plan
No guessing. No rushing. No emotional trading.
This week, we trade with clarity—not vibes.