Breaking News To Trading Moves

Most trading mentors are failed stock traders

22 min · 25. Mai 2026
Episode Most trading mentors are failed stock traders Cover

Beschreibung

Welcome to Breaking News to Trading Moves. In this episode, we debate one of the most uncomfortable questions in retail trading: are most trading mentors genuinely skilled market operators, or are they failed stock traders who learned to sell courses? The discussion starts with a simple comparison. In medicine, an X-ray can show a clean break. In trading, the picture is far less clear. Opportunity, education, marketing, ego and exploitation all blur together. Millions of retail traders enter the market hoping to trade their way to financial freedom, but the odds are brutal. The case against trading mentors One side argues that the day trading ecosystem can work like an extraction machine. Brokerages, exchanges, platforms, course sellers and influencers can all profit from trading activity whether the trader wins or loses. The more people trade, the more fees, clicks and course sales the system can generate. This is where the mentor problem becomes serious. Many so-called educators do not need to be profitable traders. They only need to look profitable. Screenshots, rented cars, luxury backdrops, selective wins and vague “financial freedom” messaging can create the illusion of success. Anti-skilled influencers can damage followers by pushing hype, optimism and urgency. They may promote low-volume stocks, create buying pressure, and then leave followers holding the bag when momentum fades. In that environment, the mentor is not really teaching trading. They are using attention as liquidity. The case for real trading skill The opposing view is that trading itself is not automatically a scam. A small minority of traders do appear to generate persistent returns through discipline, execution and market structure. The debate highlights that a tiny elite can read order flow, use aggressive limit orders, manage risk and exploit short-term inefficiencies. But that does not make the average mentor trustworthy. A high failure rate does not prove every trader is fake, but it does mean the burden of proof should be high. If someone claims they can teach people to win consistently, they should show real records, realistic risk and drawdowns across different market conditions. Key points from the debate 1. Most retail traders lose because the game becomes negative-sum after fees, spreads, taxes and emotional mistakes. 2. Trading mentors often make more reliable money from courses, communities and subscriptions than from trading itself. 3. Survivorship bias hides the graveyard of failed traders, blown accounts and abandoned strategies. 4. Social media rewards confidence, not accuracy, so loud voices often beat careful, risk-focused educators. 5. Real trading skill exists, but it is rare, difficult to verify and usually far less glamorous than the marketing suggests. 6. The most dangerous mentors sell certainty in a market built on uncertainty. Why this matters for traders This episode is not saying every educator is fake or every trader should quit. It is saying traders must separate marketing from mechanics. A mentor who only shows wins, avoids discussing losses, promises easy freedom, or refuses to explain risk is not offering education. They are selling emotion. The real question is not whether someone sounds confident. The real question is whether their process survives costs, volatility, losing streaks and changing markets. If the answer is unclear, protecting your capital matters more than buying another course. #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #TradingMentors #TradingPsychology #RiskManagement #TradingEducation

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Episode Intraday noise can make good traders look stupid Cover

Intraday noise can make good traders look stupid

A good trading decision can look completely wrong for several hours before the market proves it right. Intraday price action is full of false breaks, sharp reversals, algorithmic moves, headline reactions and emotional order flow. None of these automatically mean your analysis was poor. Many traders judge themselves by what happens immediately after entry. If price moves against them, they assume they made a mistake. If it moves in their favour, they assume they were right. But short-term movement is not always evidence. Sometimes it is simply volatility doing what volatility does. Why Good Trades Often Look Bad First A high-quality setup can still experience: • A sharp move against the position before reversing • A false breakout that triggers obvious stops A liquidity sweep above or below a key level • A temporary reaction to news or sentiment • A slow period before momentum arrives • A gap between the thesis and the market’s timing Judging a trade too early is dangerous. The market does not have to validate your idea immediately. Price may test your stop placement and patience before the trade develops. Noise Is Not New Information Noise is movement that does not materially change the setup. New information is something that genuinely weakens or invalidates the thesis. Traders who cannot tell the difference may exit strong positions too early, move stops impulsively or reverse at the worst moment. Before reacting, ask: • Has the technical structure actually broken? • Has the catalyst changed? • Has the company or sector received meaningful news? • Has the expected time horizon expired? • Has the original risk level been reached? • Or am I simply uncomfortable because price is moving against me? Discomfort is not always a signal. Sometimes it is only the emotional cost of holding through normal volatility. Good Trading Is About Process Professional trading is not about looking right every minute. It is about repeatable decisions based on defined risk. A good trade can lose, while a bad trade can win. One outcome does not prove the quality of the process. A strong process includes: • A clear reason for entering • A defined invalidation level • A position size that allows normal volatility • A realistic time horizon • A plan for taking profits • A willingness to accept uncertainty With these elements in place, intraday fluctuations become easier to tolerate. You stop treating every candle as a verdict on your ability. Match the Trade to the Timeframe A swing trade should not be managed like a scalp. A multi-day idea should not be abandoned because of one weak 15-minute candle. A reversal may look dramatic on a 5-minute chart but remain irrelevant on the daily chart. Return to the timeframe that produced the idea. Do not let a short-term emotional response overrule a longer-term plan without genuine evidence. Patience Is Not Blind Hope Patience does not mean holding forever or refusing to admit you are wrong. It means allowing the trade enough space and time to work while respecting the original invalidation point. Blind hope says, “It will come back.” Disciplined patience says, “The thesis remains valid, the risk is defined and the market has not reached the level that proves me wrong.” #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #TradingPsychology #RiskManagement #PriceAction #MarketNoise #TradingDiscipline #TraderMindset #Patience

Gestern22 min
Episode Abbott’s Resilient Medical Device Growth and Market Impact Cover

Abbott’s Resilient Medical Device Growth and Market Impact

Abbott Laboratories delivered a stronger-than-expected second quarter and raised its full-year profit outlook. Revenue reached $12.59 billion, adjusted earnings were $1.31 per share, and the company increased its 2026 adjusted EPS forecast to $5.45-$5.60 from $5.38-$5.58. $ABT rose around 12% as investors focused on resilient demand for cardiovascular devices, diabetes technology and cancer screening. Medical-device sales increased 9% to $5.85 billion, while diagnostics revenue reached $3.09 billion. The reported diagnostics increase included the Exact Sciences acquisition, while Cologuard generated mid-teens growth from new and repeat users. Winners Diversified medical-device companies Names: $ABT (Abbott Laboratories), $BSX (Boston Scientific), $SYK (Stryker), $MDT (Medtronic) Abbott is the direct winner because stronger results and higher guidance challenge fears that device demand is weakening. Boston Scientific, Stryker and Medtronic also gained after the update. These companies sell products used in cardiovascular treatment, surgery and chronic care. Resilient procedure demand could lift earnings expectations and medtech valuations. Diabetes and chronic-care technology Names: $PODD (Insulet), $TNDM (Tandem Diabetes Care), $EW (Edwards Lifesciences) Abbott said patients with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer are less likely to postpone treatment. That supports Insulet and Tandem Diabetes Care, which sell insulin-delivery systems, and Edwards Lifesciences, which is exposed to structural-heart procedures. These businesses depend on recurring medical need rather than discretionary spending. Procedure-dependent surgical technology Names: $ISRG (Intuitive Surgical), $JNJ (Johnson and Johnson), $ZBH (Zimmer Biomet) Intuitive Surgical, Johnson and Johnson and Zimmer Biomet could benefit if Abbott improves procedure-related sentiment. Abbott’s cardiovascular growth suggests essential and semi-elective treatments may hold up better, supporting surgical robots, implants and hospital equipment. Losers Managed-care insurers Names: $UNH (UnitedHealth Group), $HUM (Humana), $ELV (Elevance Health), $CVS (CVS Health) Stronger procedure demand is not positive for every healthcare company. UnitedHealth, Humana, Elevance Health and CVS Health can face higher claims when patients continue using hospitals, diagnostics and specialist treatments. Resilient treatment volumes can pressure insurers’ medical-cost ratios. Continuous glucose-monitoring competitors Names: $DXCM (DexCom), $SENS (Senseonics Holdings) DexCom and Senseonics face greater competition as Abbott expands Libre technology, distribution and its product range. Abbott’s scale could create pricing pressure, raise customer-acquisition costs and make health-plan coverage harder to secure. Cancer-screening challengers Names: $GH (Guardant Health), $GRAL (GRAIL) Guardant Health and GRAIL may face a stronger competitor as Abbott builds a broader cancer-diagnostics platform around Cologuard. Abbott’s resources may make adoption, reimbursement and investor attention harder for smaller companies. #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #Abbott #ABT #HealthcareStocks #MedTech #MedicalDevices #Diagnostics #CancerScreening #DiabetesTechnology #Earnings #HealthcareInvesting #LongIdeas #ShortIdeas #MarketNews

Gestern18 min
Episode Why holding overnight is not as risky as traders think Cover

Why holding overnight is not as risky as traders think

Many traders believe every position must be closed before the session ends because holding overnight automatically creates unacceptable risk. The fear usually comes from price gaps, unexpected headlines, earnings surprises or changes in global markets while the trader is asleep. Those risks are real, but the conclusion is often exaggerated. Holding overnight is not automatically reckless. What matters is position size, setup quality, liquidity, event awareness and preparation for an adverse move. Overnight risk is easier to see An overnight gap is obvious because the market may open away from the previous close. Intraday risk feels less dramatic, although sudden reversals and breaking news can strike at any time. Closing everything before the bell may avoid some gap risk, but it can create other problems: • Taking weaker trades because of pressure to make money quickly • Overtrading because every position must work within a few hours • Using tight stops that are hit by normal market noise • Missing trends that need several sessions to develop Risk does not disappear when a position is closed before the market shuts. It simply changes form. Time can improve a good setup Strong trades do not always move immediately. A breakout may need time to attract volume. A trend may pause before continuing. Forcing every idea into a single day can lead to premature exits. Holding overnight can provide exposure to multi-day momentum, breakout continuation, sector rotation, post-earnings drift and wider market trends. The advantage is giving a well-researched setup enough time while keeping risk controlled. Position size matters more than the clock A large overnight position can be dangerous. A smaller position may be manageable. Traders often focus too much on the holding period and not enough on exposure. Before holding overnight, ask: • How much could the stock realistically gap against me? • Is earnings, economic data or company news due? • Is the stock liquid enough to exit without excessive slippage? • Is my position small enough to survive an abnormal move? • Would a gap damage my account or create only a planned loss? When the size is appropriate, an overnight move does not have to threaten the account. The position should already allow for a different opening price. Not every trade belongs overnight Earnings, regulatory decisions, court rulings, clinical trial results or major economic announcements can create unusually high uncertainty. Thinly traded stocks may also gap sharply because liquidity is limited. Avoid holding when: • The original reason for entering is no longer valid • A major binary event is approaching • The position is too large for the possible gap • Liquidity is poor • The trade has become a hope-based rescue attempt The decision should come from the setup, not hope or emotional attachment. The real skill is planned exposure Risk management is not about eliminating uncertainty. It is about choosing acceptable risks and limiting the damage when the market behaves unexpectedly. Holding overnight can reduce screen time, lower the urge to overtrade and allow stronger trends to develop. The goal is not unlimited overnight exposure. It is to stop treating every overnight position as automatically irresponsible. A carefully selected trade, held at the correct size, with no major event risk and a clear exit plan, may be less dangerous than several rushed intraday trades. #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #OvernightTrading #TradingPsychology #RiskManagement #PositionSizing #TradingDiscipline #GapRisk #TradingStrategy

16. Juli 202621 min
Episode The BlackRock Hegemony and the Asset Management Divide Cover

The BlackRock Hegemony and the Asset Management Divide

BlackRock reported adjusted earnings of $13.91 per share, while assets under management reached a record $15.34 trillion. Clients added $192 billion of net new money, with strong demand across iShares ETFs, bonds, private credit and infrastructure. Its operating margin rose to 45.9%, and management increased planned 2026 share repurchases to $2 billion. The results show that BlackRock is benefiting from rising markets, ETF adoption and demand for private assets. Why the story matters Its growth shows that investors are still allocating money across public and private markets, although smaller managers may struggle as more capital flows towards global platforms. Winners Large diversified asset managers Names: $BLK (BlackRock), $BX (Blackstone) Reason: BlackRock is the direct winner from record assets, strong inflows, higher margins and increased share repurchases. Blackstone may benefit as investors continue allocating money to large private-market platforms with global brands and broad product ranges. Alternative asset managers Names: $KKR (KKR), $ARES (Ares Management) BlackRock’s private-market inflows indicate that demand for private credit and infrastructure remains healthy. KKR and Ares could benefit if pension funds, insurers and wealthy investors continue increasing allocations outside public stocks and bonds. Borrowers are also using private lenders when bank financing is restricted. Market infrastructure companies Names: $NDAQ (Nasdaq), $CME (CME Group) Reason: More assets flowing into ETFs can support trading activity, market data, index licensing and risk-management demand. Nasdaq benefits from exchange services and index products. CME benefits from futures and options activity across multiple asset classes. Losers Traditional active managers Names: $TROW (T. Rowe Price), $JHG (Janus Henderson) Reason: The strength of BlackRock’s iShares business highlights the continuing shift towards lower-cost ETFs and passive funds. Traditional active managers may face fee pressure and weaker flows if investors prefer index products. They must deliver stronger performance or specialised strategies to justify higher charges. Mid-sized investment managers Names: $BEN (Franklin Resources), $VCTR (Victory Capital) Reason: BlackRock can invest heavily in technology, compliance and distribution while spreading those costs across a much larger asset base. Mid-sized firms may struggle to match its pricing, brand and product range, even while the wider industry grows. Private-credit competitors Names: $OWL (Blue Owl Capital), $APO (Apollo Global Management) Reason: Blue Owl and Apollo can benefit from growing private-credit demand, but BlackRock is becoming a stronger competitor. More competition may raise fundraising costs, make attractive loans harder to secure and force managers to offer better terms. Trading takeaway The bullish interpretation is that BlackRock’s quarter confirms healthy fund flows, strong ETF demand and continued expansion in private markets. The bearish interpretation is that more industry profits may be captured by a small number of financial giants. For traders, $BLK is the main stock to watch. The reaction in $BX, $KKR, $ARES, $TROW, $BEN, $OWL and $APO may show whether investors view these results as positive for the sector or as proof that BlackRock is becoming harder to compete against. #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #BlackRock #BLK #AssetManagement #ETFs #WallStreet #FinancialStocks #PrivateCredit #PrivateMarkets #AlternativeInvestments #MarketNews #Earnings #FundFlows

16. Juli 202618 min
Episode The market does not pay you more for trading more often Cover

The market does not pay you more for trading more often

Many traders assume that more screen time, more setups and more trades must eventually produce more profit. It feels logical. If one good trade can make money, then ten trades should create more opportunity. But markets do not reward activity. They reward decision quality, patience, risk control and the ability to act only when the odds are genuinely favourable. This episode explores why overtrading is one of the fastest ways to damage an otherwise sensible strategy. The problem is rarely a lack of effort. In many cases, it is too much effort applied at the wrong time. More trades do not mean more opportunity The market does not pay you for activity. Some sessions offer several clean opportunities. Other sessions offer nothing worth taking. A trader who accepts this can stay selective. A trader who does not may begin forcing entries simply to feel productive. That often leads to: • Taking weaker setups outside the plan • Entering late because of fear of missing out • Increasing size after a loss • Trading during unclear conditions • Turning boredom into unnecessary risk • Paying more through spreads and slippage The more frequently you trade, the more chances you create to make emotional, technical and risk-management mistakes. Overtrading starts before the extra trade The visible problem is the unnecessary entry. The real problem often begins earlier. You may be tired, frustrated, bored or under pressure to make money. You may have missed the first move and feel desperate to catch the next one. You may have taken a loss and feel that the market owes you a recovery. These emotions quietly lower your standards. A setup you would normally reject suddenly looks acceptable because you want action. Discipline is not only about managing an open position. It is also about protecting the quality of the decision that comes before the trade. A good trader is paid for selectivity Professional thinking means accepting that not every market condition deserves participation. You may need to sit out when: • Price is moving without clear structure • Volatility is too low or too unpredictable • The risk-to-reward ratio is unattractive • Your setup is incomplete • You are trading from emotion rather than evidence • You have reached your daily loss limit Sitting out is not laziness. Cash is also a position. Preserving focus and trading capital can be more valuable than forcing another attempt. Quality should come before frequency A strong process is built around repeatable conditions. You should know what must happen before you enter, where the trade is invalidated and how much you are prepared to lose. Reducing the number of trades can help you: • Focus on higher-quality setups • Lower transaction costs • Improve emotional control • Avoid revenge trading • Protect yourself in poor conditions • Review decisions more clearly Fewer trades do not guarantee better results, but unnecessary trades almost always create unnecessary risk. #StockMarket #Trading #Investing #DayTrading #SwingTrading #TradingPsychology #RiskManagement #Overtrading #TraderMindset #TradingDiscipline #PriceAction #TechnicalAnalysis #MarketPsychology #CapitalProtection #TradingStrategy

15. Juli 202618 min