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Realistic trader experience

Experience from Newbie to Professional (9)

By ZidanePublished about 5 hours ago 4 min read
Realistic trader experience
Photo by Arturo Añez on Unsplash

Alright, let’s go through another realistic trader experience — one that many professionals say changed the way they trade forever:

The first time holding a winning trade for weeks instead of days.

Most beginner and intermediate traders lose money because they cut winners too early. This experience is about breaking that habit and finally capturing a large trend move.

This moment often marks the transition from short-term reactive trading to professional swing trading discipline.

And if you trade the Vietnam market, this lesson is extremely relevant because strong trends in the VNIndex can produce huge multi-week runs when liquidity expands.

The Setup: A Quiet Market Before Expansion

The market had been boring for months.

No explosive moves.

Breakouts failed often.

Liquidity was average.

Many traders were frustrated.

Then slowly something started changing.

Banking stocks began forming strong bases.

Volume increased slightly.

Pullbacks became shallow.

The index itself was still quiet.

But underneath the surface, accumulation was happening.

This is one of the hardest market environments to recognize because nothing looks exciting yet.

Professionals call this phase smart money accumulation.

The Stock That Looked “Too Slow”

One particular banking stock had been moving sideways for nearly 3 months.

Tight price range.

Volume contraction.

Higher lows forming.

Most traders ignored it because it looked boring.

There were other stocks moving faster intraday.

But boring charts often hide the largest future moves.

The structure was simple:

Strong support area

Decreasing volatility

Increasing institutional volume

Then finally, one day, the breakout came.

Volume exploded.

Price closed strong above the base.

The Entry

The entry was straightforward.

Breakout confirmation.

Index stable.

Sector leadership clear.

Risk was defined below the breakout level.

At that moment, it was just another trade.

Expected outcome:

Maybe 2R profit within a few days.

Nothing extraordinary.

The First Psychological Test

Within two days, the trade moved +1.5R.

Normally, this is where many traders exit.

Profit looks good.

Fear of reversal appears.

And historically, that’s exactly what I used to do.

Take quick profit.

But something about this structure looked different.

The index — VNIndex — was starting to expand.

Liquidity increased across sectors.

That suggested a potential trend phase, not just a quick breakout.

So instead of exiting, I did something different:

I moved stop to breakeven and decided to hold.

The Second Test: Pullback Fear

After the initial move, the stock pulled back.

About –5%.

Still above breakout level.

But psychologically, it felt dangerous.

This is where many traders exit early.

Because the brain says:

“You had profit. Now it’s disappearing.”

But technically, the pullback was healthy.

Low volume.

Higher low formation.

Sector still strong.

So I stayed in.

That patience was uncomfortable.

But necessary.

The Expansion Phase

Then the real move began.

Over the next two weeks:

+10%

+18%

+25%

The stock became one of the strongest in the sector.

Volume surged daily.

Media started talking about banking stocks again.

Retail traders began chasing.

This is when holding becomes emotionally difficult again — but for the opposite reason.

Now the problem is fear of giving back profit.

The Temptation to Exit Early

At +25%, profit was already larger than most of my previous trades.

The temptation was strong:

“Take it now.”

But the structure was still intact.

No major distribution.

No sector weakness.

Index trend still strong.

So instead of exiting fully, I used a trailing stop strategy.

Let the trend decide when the trade ends.

The Climax Phase

Eventually, the stock reached nearly +40% from entry.

Volume became extremely high.

Daily candles became larger.

Momentum accelerated.

This kind of move often signals late-stage enthusiasm.

Then finally:

A large reversal day appeared.

Heavy volume.

Long upper wick.

That was the signal.

The trend was likely ending.

The trailing stop triggered shortly after.

The trade closed.

Total result:

About 6R profit.

Why This Trade Was Life-Changing

Not because of money.

But because it proved something important:

One great trade can outperform dozens of small trades.

Before that experience, my trading style was:

Enter

Take small profit

Repeat frequently

After that experience, I understood something professionals always say:

“Let winners run.”

But that phrase is easy to say.

It is extremely hard to do emotionally.

The Real Psychological Barrier

The biggest challenge is not finding good trades.

It’s sitting through the middle of a trend.

During that time you experience:

Pullbacks

Doubt

News noise

Profit fluctuations

Your brain constantly asks:

“What if the profit disappears?”

That fear causes early exits.

But trends require patience.

The Structural Lesson

Great trend trades usually follow a pattern:

Accumulation phase (boring)

Breakout phase (exciting)

Trend expansion (steady gains)

Euphoria phase (fast gains)

Distribution (trend ends)

Most traders only capture phase 2.

Professionals capture phase 2–4.

That difference dramatically changes profitability.

The VNIndex Factor

In Vietnam, when the VNIndex enters expansion mode, sector leaders can move 30–70% within weeks.

But only traders who hold through volatility capture those moves.

Scalpers miss them.

Impatient traders exit early.

And then they watch from the sidelines while the trend continues.

The Long-Term Impact

After that trade, my system changed.

Instead of fixed profit targets, I added:

Partial profit strategy

Trailing stops

Trend structure monitoring

Now trades have two outcomes:

Small loss or small gain (most trades)

OR

Large trend capture (rare but powerful).

Those rare large winners drive long-term profitability.

The Most Important Lesson

You do not need to be right every day.

You do not need many trades.

You need a few exceptional trades each year.

But to capture them, you must:

Enter correctly

Manage risk

Hold through noise

Exit when structure breaks

That discipline separates amateurs from professionals.

advicecareereconomyinvestingpersonal financestocksfintech

About the Creator

Zidane

I have a series of articles on money-saving tips. If you're facing financial issues, feel free to check them out—Let grow together, :)

IIf you love my topic, free feel share and give me a like. Thanks

https://learn-tech-tips.blogspot.com/

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