Good morning, tradersâŚ
Thereâs a special kind of pain that only traders know.
Itâs not the pain of a bad setup or a losing streak â those are part of the game.
Iâm talking about the pain that hits when you knew what to do⌠and you just didnât do it.
You had the setup. You had the rules. The little angel on your shoulder whispered the right move in your earâŚ
And you ignored all of it.
Not because you were being reckless. Not because you didnât care. But because you got a little too comfortable, too clever ⌠or, in my case â too complacent.
If youâve ever skipped a piece of your trade plan thinking, âI probably wonât need itâŚâ â itâs time to pay attention to this storyâŚ
My Big Mistake
Many years ago, when I was a less disciplined trader, I ruined a promising trade for one simple, stupid reason.
I didnât want to pay for the hedge.
I was setting up a bullish play on the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ: QQQ). At that time, tech was getting bought aggressively after a short pullback, and all the signals I rely on were flashing green.
Great setup. Clean risk/reward. I was ready to press the button.
Then I looked at the cost of the hedge, buying a cheap out-of-the-money put to cap the downside.
The put wouldâve cost me just $400. But I hesitated. I remember thinking, âEh⌠I probably wonât need it.â
Yet what happened next proved me utterly wrong.
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The market opened the next day, and it looked fine (at first) â tech up slightly, everything was working as planned.
Then, around 10:30 AM, headlines hit that the Fed might raise rates faster than expected. It didnât matter if it was real or not â algos panicked, and the selling kicked in hard.
My trade got smoked. Fast.
What shouldâve been a small loss, capped by a hedge, turned into a five-figure dent in my P&L.
All because I wanted to âsaveâ a measly $400.
Now, Iâve made plenty of regrettable moves in my career (we all have) â but that one stuck with me.
Because it wasnât just a bad decision, it was a lazy and avoidable one.
I knew better. I had the plan. I had the setup. I just didnât follow through all the way.
And the part I skipped â the small, boring, protective part â is what wouldâve saved the whole trade.
The Lesson I Learned
Thereâs a lesson in this, and itâs one I hammer into my students all the time:
The market doesnât reward half-measures.
You donât get partial credit for setting up 90% of a good trade. There are no silver medals in the stock market. You either followed the plan or you didnât. And if you leave the back door open, the market will find your lapse in judgment.
I donât care if itâs a $100,000 position or a $500 scalp â if your system says hedge, then hedge. If your system says take profits at 30%, take them. If your system says stop out at 20%, get out.
The best traders in the world donât âwing it.â They donât leave out the parts of the trade that feel optional. They treat every part of the trade like it matters â because it does.
Most traders think the big money comes from the big wins. It doesnât.
It comes from not losing big when things go sideways. It comes from staying solvent. It comes from living to fight another day.
It comes from consistency. Repeating the process. Doing the right thing when no oneâs watching â and when it doesnât feel exciting.
That $400 hedge? Boring. Didnât âfeelâ necessary at the time.
But it wouldâve turned that trade into a minor scratch. Instead, I took a loss that was orders of magnitude larger than the cost of the put.
Even worse, this wasnât a âlesson I needed to learn.â I already knew it. I just got lazy.
And thatâs the danger â because most traders donât blow up from a lack of knowledge. They blow up from cutting corners.
So next time youâre staring at a hedge you think you wonât need ⌠or youâre debating whether to size down just a little â or youâre tempted to stretch your stop one more strikeâŚ
Ask yourself: Is this really the trade? Or am I skipping the part that actually protects me?
That small decision â one that feels easy to ignore â separates a solid trade from an abject disaster.
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And next time youâre in a spot (like I was in my QQQ trade), remember the lesson I learnedâŚ
Iâve never regretted putting on a hedge I didnât need. But Iâll never forget the time I skipped one I did.
Happy trading,
Jeff Zananiri
*Past performance does not indicate future results