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A mature trading system only addresses three things: buy, sell, and wait.
Many people think that a trading system is just a bunch of indicators, parameters, and charts.
Actually, that's not true.
A real trading system is not about making you "look very professional,"
but about helping you know what to do and what not to do in the market.
A mature trading system should at least answer four questions:
When to buy?
Is it about continuing a pattern or breaking a key level?
When to sell?
Is it about stop-loss exit or waiting for the trend to end?
How much to buy?
How to control position size and whether the risk is manageable?
What to buy?
What kind of assets and market conditions are worth entering?
If you can't clearly answer these four questions,
then what you have is not a system, but just a feeling.
Why do many people get more confused the more they learn?
Because they always focus on a single candlestick, short-term fluctuations, and intraday noise.
Today they look at a breakout, tomorrow at divergence, and the day after they want to catch the bottom.
In the end, it's not that they can't analyze,
but that they lack hierarchy.
A truly stable system looks like this:
Set the direction on a higher timeframe,
find patterns, structure, and energy resonance on a lower timeframe,
only then is it worth taking action.
Not every candlestick is important,
and not every fluctuation is worth participating in.
Once your trading system is formed, you'll gradually realize:
you make fewer trades,
but you understand better what you're waiting for.
You no longer ask, "Can I chase this bullish candle?"
but instead ask, "Is this an opportunity in my system?"
This is the true value of a system—
not to increase the certainty of each trade,
but to help you maintain consistency over the long term.