0:01 Eight years ago, I was a college student
0:03 with no idea what I was doing, trying
0:05 random strategies, trying to grow small
0:06 trading accounts. And in the beginning,
0:09 my first summer, I took about $2,500 and
0:12 flipped it into over $15,000, only to
0:14 make one stupid mistake and blow all of
0:16 it in one day. After that, I spent years
0:18 clawing back acquiring information. But
0:20 fast forward to now, I'm lucky enough to
0:23 have 15, sometimes $30,000 profit weeks
0:24 and have scaled my trading and investing
0:27 capital well into seven figures. Knowing
0:28 what I know now, if I had to start over
0:30 with a small account, these are the six
0:32 secrets that I would use to grow those
0:34 accounts quickly with also not blowing
0:36 up any accounts. These keys took me
0:37 years to actually figure out. And number
0:39 six is probably the most important of
0:40 them all that took me from honestly
0:42 losing money in my trading journey with
0:44 small accounts that now allow me to size
0:46 into my day trades and scale up my
0:47 trading accounts. And my goal is to get
0:48 you to that point as well. So, let's get
0:50 right into it with secret number one,
0:52 which is only focusing on high quality
0:54 trade setups. It's really easy to fall
0:56 into the trap in trading and thinking,
0:58 well, if I can make $300 in any given
1:00 trade, if I just take 10 of those, I
1:02 should be able to make $3,000 in a day.
1:03 If I take 20 trades, I should be able to
1:06 make $6,000. This is not how it works in
1:08 trading for a few reasons. First big
1:10 reason is because trading, all you're
1:12 trying to do is adhere to your strategy
1:14 as closely as possible. And there's only
1:15 going to be a certain amount of trades
1:17 in any given session that are going to
1:20 follow those A+ setup criteria. If
1:21 you're trying to take as many trades as
1:23 possible, the probability of you forcing
1:25 trades that aren't there and taking
1:27 lower quality setups are going to be
1:28 extremely high. The second thing is
1:30 you're paying execution fees. So, if
1:32 you're taking a ton of trades that maybe
1:34 aren't your best quality, they may not
1:36 move fully in your direction and you may
1:37 end up spending a lot more on fees than
1:39 you've hoped. And additionally, it's
1:41 really stressful to try to make the
1:43 right decisions all day throughout the
1:44 session. And if they're not perfectly to
1:46 your strategy, trying to use your
1:47 discretion to be right. And it's going
1:49 to be way less stressful if you follow
1:50 this tip that I'm about to share with
1:52 you. This is what I always do when I'm
1:53 about to get into trades. And I've
1:54 taught this to a ton of people who have
1:56 thanked me deeply for this lesson. And
1:59 that is before entering any trade, try
2:01 to find every single reason to not get
2:02 into the trade. And what this is going
2:04 to do is eliminate something called
2:06 confirmation bias. And confirmation bias
2:08 is basically trying to change things a
2:10 little bit and try to go outside of your
2:12 rules a little bit to convince yourself
2:13 that there's a setup there so that you
2:15 don't miss out on an opportunity. And as
2:18 difficult as it is, I try to find every
2:20 reason to not take a trade. And if
2:21 everything is a green light, saying this
2:24 is undeniably within your system and a
2:26 good idea, those are always the trades
2:27 that end up playing out to full fruition
2:29 and being massive successful trades for
2:31 me. And if I'm sort of hesitant trying
2:33 to convince myself it's a good idea,
2:34 these are always where I start to get in
2:36 trouble. So this will allow you to be
2:38 hyper selective and only focus on your
2:40 highest quality setups. And also, you
2:41 don't have to trade all day long. Okay,
2:42 so let's move into secret number two,
2:45 which is mastering trading as a game
2:47 first, then focusing on the money
2:49 second. And this seems counterintuitive
2:51 because obviously the point of trading
2:53 is to make money. But in order to
2:54 actually ever achieve that, you need to
2:57 learn it as a game and not focus on the
2:59 money at all. So this is what I mean. As
3:00 professional traders, we're looking at
3:02 our trading with something called
3:04 expectancy. And this expectancy formula
3:06 is how much money we're expected to make
3:08 on any given trade within our systems
3:10 framework regardless of whether it's a
3:12 win or a loss. And this is going to be
3:13 important for multiple reasons that
3:14 we'll get into a little bit later into
3:16 the video. Okay. But what we do is look
3:19 at trades in terms of units of risk or
3:21 percents of account. Basically, whenever
3:23 we're entering a trade, we put a certain
3:25 amount of risk on the table with an
3:27 expectancy to make a certain amount of
3:28 reward if we're right about the
3:30 direction of the position. Now, this is
3:31 important because if you can strip the
3:33 money away from this and just look at
3:35 this as a simple game, this is where you
3:37 actually get into the mastery of
3:38 understanding trading, the mechanics,
3:40 how your strategy works, and the way you
3:42 need to actually act to then be able to
3:44 inject the money back into the process
3:46 basically by default. And now you
3:47 understood the framework and the money
3:49 is just a byproduct of you being a good
3:51 trader. Okay. What most people do in the
3:52 beginning and what unsuccessful traders
3:54 are going to do is they're going to make
3:56 their decisions around how they feel
3:57 about the money. And I used to fall into
3:59 this trap in the beginning. If I was up
4:00 on profit on the day, I would try to
4:02 hold on to my profits as tight as I
4:03 could and I would be changing my
4:05 behavior. If I was down on the day, I
4:07 would revenge trade, take more trades,
4:08 maybe some that weren't there, trying to
4:10 fight back to positive, which is
4:11 changing the behavior I know I need to
4:13 do in order to be successful. Or if I
4:15 was up on the day, I would take crazy
4:17 risks that otherwise I wouldn't take,
4:19 which would end up eating into my
4:20 profits as well. So, let's look at this
4:23 scenario in terms of a bad trader and a
4:24 good trader, what the good trader is
4:25 doing to actually be able to be
4:27 successful. So, say both traders are
4:29 starting with $1,000. The bad traders
4:31 risking $100 per trade loses two trades
4:33 back to back. And then in order to fight
4:35 back to positive, they double down, put
4:37 $200 of risk on the next trade and then
4:39 lose that, ending up with three losses
4:41 with now nearly half the account lost
4:43 and them almost needing a 100% return to
4:45 climb back to even getting to break
4:46 even. Notice how they're increasing
4:48 their risk when they're not performing
4:50 well and exponentially needing to
4:51 perform better and better to pull off
4:53 miraculous things in order to have a
4:55 fighting chance at maintaining their
4:56 account. Now, let's look at scenario
4:58 number two with the good trader. Also
5:00 starting with $1,000, but this trader is
5:03 only using $2.5% of their account or $25
5:05 per trade risk. Say they lose three
5:08 trades back to back are only down $75,
5:10 keeping their risk uniform each time,
5:12 even with one or two normalsiz wins.
5:14 Now, their account is back to break
5:16 even, actually into small profit, and
5:17 they don't need to pull off any miracles
5:19 in order to preserve this account and
5:20 have a fighting chance. But this example
5:22 goes to show you that trading is a
5:24 long-term game. In order to even have a
5:26 shot at this, you need to be able to
5:28 preserve capital. It's really easy to
5:29 start changing things, revenge trading,
5:31 doing what you're not supposed to do
5:33 when the money is a component of this
5:34 process, and you're risking different
5:36 amounts of money on each trade depending
5:38 on superstition, how you're feeling,
5:39 your confidence level that can easily
5:41 get you completely thrown off the ball.
5:43 Focusing on it like a game is going to
5:45 eliminate all of that and make it much
5:47 more simple for you to understand what's
5:48 right, what's wrong, and what's going to
5:50 work over the long term. Okay? I always
5:52 tell people, trading is not about being
5:53 right. It's about making money. This is
5:55 often times misconstrued. Every time I
5:57 show a trade to someone who doesn't know
5:58 trading, they're always like, "Well, how
6:00 do you know that this is going to work?"
6:01 And I answer back to them. I'm like, "I
6:02 don't know if this is going to work."
6:04 And they look at me all confused. But if
6:06 I'm following this process that I know
6:08 works over time, all I need to focus on
6:11 is deviating from the criteria as little
6:13 as possible when I'm executing and I
6:14 know if it's a successful strategy, it's
6:16 going to result in profit over time. So,
6:19 the significance of any individual trade
6:20 actually doesn't matter at all. Being
6:22 right doesn't matter at all. is not
6:24 about gambling or fast money. The only
6:26 job of a trader is to execute the plan
6:28 as precisely as possible, minimizing
6:31 risk and maximizing upside potential.
6:32 And treating it as a simple game first
6:34 was how I was able to actually get to
6:35 that point. Okay, so let's get into
6:37 secret number three, which is do not
6:39 take profit too soon. When I first
6:41 started my trading journey and I was
6:42 talking to people who really didn't
6:44 understand trading, I would hear things
6:45 like no one ever went broke taking
6:47 profit. Take profit if you have it. And
6:48 if you've had things that have been in
6:50 profit and gone to loss, this may make
6:52 sense initially, but this is actually
6:55 the worst possible thing that you can do
6:56 as a trader. And maybe some of the worst
6:59 advice that almost made me completely
7:00 fail at this entire journey. So, here's
7:02 how to avoid it. Okay, I've done this so
7:04 much. This is probably one of the
7:05 biggest things that I need to combat in
7:07 my trading is taking profits off too
7:09 soon. I've been working on it full-time.
7:10 I'm getting much better at it, as I'll
7:11 show you here in a second. This is what
7:13 to avoid. Okay, so most people say they
7:15 enter a trade hoping that the price is
7:16 going to come up to here before coming
7:18 down to here. Trade starts moving
7:19 against them. All of a sudden, it moves
7:21 really quickly against them and now they
7:22 don't want to lock in a loss. So,
7:24 they'll end up holding it. Then, just
7:26 desperate not to lose any money. As soon
7:27 as the price comes back to the entry,
7:29 they take it off for substantially less
7:31 profit than they were exposing
7:33 themselves to. And from reinforcing that
7:34 sort of mindset, maybe they enter a
7:36 trade here. Price starts moving down
7:38 against them. They think, "Okay, all I
7:39 have to do is hold this again until it
7:41 comes back up so I don't have to lose money."
7:43 money."
7:45 Then the trade just continues to drop so
7:47 far that they're forced to realize a
7:49 massive loss. Or say you buy in at a
7:51 level like this, trade starts moving
7:52 really nicely in your direction. Then
7:54 all of a sudden it starts coming almost
7:56 all the way back down to your entry. So
7:57 then you take the trade off so that you
7:59 don't lose money only for the trade to
8:01 continue moving all the way in your
8:03 direction and resulting in a massive
8:05 win. If you're falling into these traps,
8:07 you're basically flipping the successful
8:09 mechanics of trading on its head. By not
8:10 wanting to realize a loss when the trade
8:12 is moving against you, you're opening
8:14 yourself up to catastrophic downside.
8:15 Okay? And if you're taking trades off
8:16 early that are starting to reverse,
8:18 you're basically reacting emotionally
8:20 from being scarred from watching trades
8:22 move into profit and then come down and
8:23 make you less money. And it's preventing
8:25 you from actually allowing your full
8:26 edge to play out and your wins to be
8:28 open-ended. What you need to be doing
8:30 and what successful trade mechanics are
8:31 is always being disciplined about your
8:33 risk and understanding the math behind
8:35 the game to make a decision on where
8:36 you're going to take profit before you
8:38 even enter a trade. That way, the
8:40 temporary fluctuation in price has no
8:42 impact on your emotions and can play
8:43 fully out in your favor. Some of my
8:45 biggest trades have been when I'm away
8:47 from the charts or actually overnight.
8:49 And the reason for this is because I
8:50 can't look at the chart and try to
8:52 justify reasons for me to lock in
8:54 profit. If I'm risking $1,000 and I'm up
8:57 $6,000 and then I watch that $6,000 turn
8:59 into a $2,000 win and I end up getting
9:01 closed out, next time I'm in that
9:02 situation, it's really hard to not think
9:04 about it and want to lock in the 6K that
9:06 could then turn into 15, $20,000. And
9:08 this is really where a lot of the money
9:09 is made in trading is allowing your
9:11 winners to run like crazy so that when
9:12 you go on losing streaks or you're not
9:14 performing successfully in trading, you
9:16 can actually still be okay. And I'll
9:17 show you an example of this happening to
9:19 me recently. So, I get into a trade.
9:20 Price pushes almost all the way back up
9:22 to my entry before breaking down and
9:24 moving in my direction. Then,
9:26 eventually, I get a big push down in my
9:28 direction. You can see I locked in 1300.
9:31 I have $1,500 in profit still open,
9:33 risking $1,000 on the whole trade. And
9:34 you can see price starts to move up
9:36 against me, but because of my strategy
9:38 and because of my rules, I don't take
9:40 the trade off. And then this trade
9:41 continues to immediately reverse,
9:43 continues moving substantially lower,
9:45 which resulted in way more profit than
9:47 if I'm just taking the trades off at
9:48 this level. Okay, the money was made in
9:50 trading or letting your winners run and
9:51 keeping your risk contained. Okay, and
9:53 this takes us into secret number four,
9:56 which is using one strategy at a time.
9:57 In the beginning of my trading journey,
9:58 there was a period where I was
10:00 completely lost. I was trying to find
10:02 all sorts of different ideas to try to
10:04 apply into the market. And what I would
10:05 do is basically try to find different
10:07 patterns, different ideas, and just go
10:09 into the market with just general ideas
10:10 and try to see if I could make profit
10:12 off of it. And I'd have some patterns
10:13 that would work, and I would think,
10:14 "This is the golden goose egg. This is
10:16 the perfect solution that I've been
10:17 waiting for." And it would stop working
10:19 for some time, and then I would bail out
10:20 on it and jump to the next idea. And
10:22 this is wrong for two reasons. This is
10:24 why it's important to focus on only one
10:26 strategy at a time. And the first reason
10:28 is sometimes the best trading strategy
10:30 isn't going to be the one that looks
10:32 like the apparent winner. Everything in
10:34 trading needs to be rooted by behavioral
10:35 studies and data. You can't improve what
10:36 you don't measure. If you're not
10:38 measuring yourself and looking at your
10:40 patterns and looking how to optimize
10:41 that, you're never going to be able to
10:43 get to the next level because it's not
10:45 always about following what looks and
10:47 feels to be apparently the right answer.
10:48 Okay? And if you're jumping from
10:49 strategy to strategy, it's going to be
10:51 infinitely harder for you to be able to
10:53 isolate variables, focus on what you
10:55 know works, and actually be able to have
10:57 conviction and get good at one single
10:58 thing. So, let's take this for an
11:00 example. Say we have two trading
11:02 strategies. One trading strategy wins
11:05 60% of the time and the other wins 30%
11:06 of the time. Most people are going to
11:08 see, oh, this is working more. I should
11:10 go with the strategy that is working
11:11 more often. But if we look at a scenario
11:13 like this where we have our 60% win
11:15 rate, but when we're losing, we're
11:18 losing 5 R 5R. This can still result us
11:20 over time in negative R and actually
11:22 give us an unprofitable result where if
11:24 we take that same 30% win rate strategy,
11:26 we're literally losing seven out of the
11:28 10 trades. But when we're winning, we're
11:30 making positive 5R, positive 5R. Say we
11:32 were just trading this and jumping from
11:34 pattern to pattern. Maybe we're getting
11:36 streaks of success with a higher win
11:38 rate strategy, so we feel like it's
11:39 working. And because the strategy that
11:41 wins less, maybe we have a lot of losses
11:43 right up front. If you're not measuring
11:44 that and you're jumping around from
11:46 strategy and not focusing all your
11:48 effort on one, the actual answer to your
11:49 trading that is less apparent may
11:51 actually never come to you. And this is
11:52 also why I harp on about it being
11:54 extremely important to journal your
11:56 trades. Like I said earlier, you can't
11:57 improve what you don't measure. What
11:58 feels like it's the best may not
12:00 actually be the best in trading. Okay.
12:02 And once I picked one strategy at a time
12:04 to focus on, this allowed me to get into
12:05 there, focus on the probability and
12:08 statistics of each strategy, master it,
12:10 have an execution plan, and then apply
12:12 it into the markets without needing to
12:13 guess on what I think is working, what's
12:15 not working. This is where I was able to
12:16 start scaling accounts and turning my
12:18 trading into an income generating
12:20 machine rather than just guessing and
12:21 gambling. Okay? And we see this with our
12:22 team as well. Most of the time we have
12:24 people come in and learn and the ones
12:26 that end up getting really really good
12:27 and becoming profitable are ones that
12:29 are hyperfocusing on mastering one
12:31 strategy. Jack of all trades is a master
12:33 of none and the same is true in trading.
12:35 Which brings us to secret number five
12:36 which is preserving your capital. Okay,
12:38 this is one of the big ones and one of
12:40 the most important things in order to
12:42 have longevity in your trading. As good
12:44 as your strategy is and as much as you
12:46 study the data, there are just going to
12:48 be individual trading sessions where
12:50 price action is not good for your
12:51 strategy. Okay, it's really hard to
12:52 account for that. But what I used to do
12:54 is I'd be doing really, really well. I'd
12:55 be following all the strategies and then
12:57 I would have a day where even though I'm
12:59 following all of my rules, I just keep
13:01 losing, losing, losing way more than
13:03 what I was statistically probable to
13:05 lose. Sometimes the market conditions
13:07 are just going to be bad for your
13:08 strategy. It doesn't necessarily mean
13:10 that your strategy is broken or you're
13:12 doing something individually wrong. But
13:14 this is a really dangerous territory as
13:15 well because you can think that you're
13:17 doing something wrong and if you're not
13:18 careful, you can overtrade because
13:20 you're thinking, okay, it's not
13:21 statistically probable for me to have
13:23 this many losses in a session. I should
13:25 just keep trading because it's a weird
13:27 anomaly and I need to make some money to
13:28 even out my data. And this can lead to
13:31 what we call blowup days or lapses in
13:33 judgment that can erase a lot of
13:34 progress and can be very very
13:36 discouraging to come back to if you have
13:38 substantial losses. And these draw down
13:39 periods can either make or break your
13:41 success. If you have a really bad day,
13:43 then god forbid you have a second bad
13:45 day after that, it's almost impossible
13:46 to recover. Okay. So, what I do for my
13:48 trading in order to prevent this is
13:50 basically have a rule for myself that if
13:52 I ever at any point go down by three
13:54 total loss amounts, I'm done trading for
13:56 the day. So, if I take a loss, take a
13:57 loss, take a loss, back to back, I'm
13:59 putting a pin in it, and I'm moving on
14:01 to trade the next day. Say if I have a
14:03 win where I make 3x what I'm risking and
14:05 then I proceed to lose six consecutive
14:06 trades, I cannot place any more trades.
14:08 And this basically prevents me from
14:10 having any single day destroying the all
14:12 the progress that I've made. The only
14:13 way I could actually lose is if the next
14:15 day I'm reapproaching the markets,
14:17 finding my quality setups, and then I
14:18 lose three again, three again. And if
14:20 you factor all of this in and you
14:22 distribute it over enough data, the
14:24 probability of that happening is
14:25 substantially lower. This is going to
14:27 keep you in the game and not allow one
14:29 lapse in judgment on any given day,
14:31 destroy your entire trading account that
14:32 you've been working on growing. The goal
14:34 of trading is to have enough consistency
14:36 over enough of a duration for you to be
14:38 able to then take profits out of and
14:39 sort of treat as an income generating
14:41 machine for yourself. If you're just
14:42 working on growing an account and then
14:44 blowing up, growing account blowing up,
14:45 you're never going to be able to have
14:47 the stability to treat this as a job.
14:49 And preserving capital and having these
14:50 stops on your trading was the number one
14:52 way that allowed me to prevent blowing
14:54 up accounts. Okay, which brings us to
14:55 secret number six, which was probably
14:57 one of the biggest aha moments in my
14:59 entire trading career that really
15:01 allowed me to start scaling accounts and
15:03 turn trading into a true income machine
15:04 for myself. Okay, and this is a pitfall
15:06 that's really easy to fall into and
15:08 really hard to sort of navigate through.
15:09 This is what I found work for myself.
15:12 And the secret is do not set and chase
15:13 daily profit goals. Even though while
15:15 I'm making content, I have a daily
15:17 profit goal, this has already been run
15:18 through and calculated through this
15:19 process. So, I'm going to show you how
15:21 to actually set and achieve your daily
15:23 profit goal, but it's not by chasing
15:24 that dollar amount each day. Here's what
15:26 I mean. Okay, most people who are trying
15:28 to solve a big problem, say we're
15:30 looking to make $10,000 a month in
15:32 trading, we're going to break this into
15:33 small pieces. Most people will think,
15:35 "Okay, well, if I'm trading 20 days out
15:36 of the month, that means that I need to
15:39 be able to make $500 per day in order to
15:41 hit my $10,000 goal." In academia, in
15:43 regular life, taking this goal and
15:45 breaking it into smaller goals is a
15:47 logical next step to achieve the main
15:49 goal. Here's why it doesn't work in
15:50 trading. Say we're looking to fight for
15:53 that $500 daily profit. And on our first
15:55 day of trading, instead of making $500,
15:58 we actually lose $250. That means that
16:00 the next day, in order to stay on pace,
16:02 not only do we need to make the $500,
16:05 but now we need to make another $500 and
16:07 recoup the $250 that we lost on the day
16:10 that we were supposed to make $500. And
16:11 like we were talking about all the other
16:13 psychological traps with, you know,
16:14 holding trades through losses, putting
16:16 more risk on a trade in order to try to
16:18 fight back in revenge trade, you become
16:20 way more susceptible to changing and
16:22 modifying your behavior trying to hit
16:24 those daily goals. And by chasing that
16:25 goal, you end up inadvertently shooting
16:27 yourself in the foot and never being
16:28 able to accomplish the goal. But this is
16:30 how I found I can actually set and hit
16:32 profit goals while making sure that I'm
16:34 still following all the fundamental
16:35 principles with trading. Let's say for
16:38 example, our goal is still $500 a day
16:40 and we're aiming to trade 20 days, which
16:42 means over the course of a month, the
16:44 goal is 10,000. So what I found works is
16:46 taking the goal, not focusing on the
16:48 money at all, and reverse engineering
16:51 success through following a processbased
16:53 goal. All I would focus on at first is
16:55 finding a repeatable strategy that I
16:57 know works. Then I'm taking it into a
16:59 simulated environment. So you can go
17:00 onto your trading view and use the
17:02 replay feature and basically trade and
17:04 journal this out over several months.
17:06 It's not really several months. It's
17:07 going to take realistically between 2
17:09 and 5 hours to do this process. But
17:11 you'll have 2 or 3 months worth of
17:13 complete data as to how you would
17:15 perform with your strategy over time.
17:17 And out of this, all you have to do is
17:18 calculate how many risk factors you
17:20 made. So if you're risking $100, you
17:22 make $300 and you make $300, that's
17:24 positive three risk factors. If you lose
17:26 100, that's negative one. And that's the
17:27 only number that you need to find out.
17:29 to say over the course of these 20
17:31 trading days over a single month, we're
17:33 statistically likely to make positive
17:35 15R with our strategy. Now, all we're
17:38 doing is taking the monthly goal and the
17:40 15R, and we're dividing this monthly
17:43 goal by the 15R, which is going to give
17:45 us how much risk we're going to use on
17:48 each trade that we take in order to by
17:51 default reverse engineer our daily goal
17:53 without ever actually focusing on the
17:54 dollar amount. And this ties back into
17:56 treating trading like a game. And now
17:58 all we have to do is focus on as closely
18:00 as possible adhering to the strategy
18:02 that we know works. We set our fixed
18:04 dollar amount and by default we're able
18:06 to hit our goal, but we're not falling
18:07 into the psychological traps of trying
18:09 to hit that dollar amount every single
18:11 day and not knowing how much we need to
18:12 risk actually to end up hitting our
18:14 overall goal. Okay? And say you come up
18:16 short of that goal, now you know what
18:17 your actual data is over time. You can
18:19 make modifications to this model. And
18:20 this is really how you're going to treat
18:22 trading more like a business. This is
18:23 why when we take people onto our team
18:25 and through our education, first we
18:26 start with the foundation and we're only
18:29 focusing on the process first and not
18:30 focusing at all about money. Then we
18:33 drill into the data proven strategies.
18:35 And then in the implementation phase and
18:37 the practice phase, this is where we can
18:38 start integrating capital. This is
18:39 basically what worked for me that I
18:41 boiled down that I now share with
18:42 others. Okay. And you can see when
18:43 students are sharing their success,
18:46 they're showing in terms of R. 8.5R win
18:48 in this case was $1,200. Shout out
18:50 Felix. You can see Nicholas 10R win on
18:52 soul. See another example up 14R today.
18:55 In this case, it was 670. So, focusing
18:56 on that process first. And this is
18:58 incredible for me to share. But just to
19:00 show you sort of what's possible, we
19:01 have members like Joe here after first
19:03 locking in the process was able to lock
19:06 in over $72,000 worth of profit via five
19:08 payouts from Topstep, right? You can see
19:10 another one of our traders here focusing
19:12 on process equity curve, higher lows,
19:14 higher high, and focusing on that
19:16 process to be able to do this. We got
19:17 Pat. Shout out to Pat. This month, he's
19:19 had one of his best trading months. He
19:21 already made $20,000 worth of profit on
19:22 his accounts. You can see here. And
19:24 we're also getting new funded traders
19:26 basically every single day on our team.
19:27 And it's just humbling for me to be able
19:28 to see that I've gone through the
19:30 trenches of this, made these mistakes,
19:31 take all the information that I've
19:33 learned, aggregate it down, share it
19:34 with people that in their first several
19:36 months are able to do things like this.
19:37 Trading is one of those things where if
19:39 you master it, even at a small level,
19:40 all you have to do is inject more
19:42 capital into it, and you can really turn
19:44 it into a machine for yourself. Okay. If
19:45 you want to dive into more trading
19:46 strategies, I'll put videos right here.
19:48 If you're interested in joining our team
19:49 and learning more, I'll put the link
19:51 right here and in the description below.
19:52 If you're still here and you appreciate
19:53 this, make sure you hit the like button
19:54 on the video. Subscribe if you want to
19:56 know when I drop next ones. But until
19:57 next time, I will see you all in the next