Spending an extra 10–15 minutes per trade on these tweaks compounds into better risk control, fewer regrets, and a portfolio driven by process—not adrenaline.
This article was written by a Financial Horse Contributor.
- Write a One-Sentence Thesis
For every new idea, jot a single clear sentence that states the bet, the catalyst, and the time frame.
Example: “Over the next 18 months, increased AI demand will push TSMC’s EPS ≥ US$9, justifying a US$175 price.”
Benefit: If you can’t squeeze it into one sentence, you don’t understand it yet.
- Apply the “5-Minute Contrarian”
Spend five minutes hunting for the best argument against your trade before clicking Buy.
Example: Bullish on luxury stocks? Scan the latest China consumer-confidence data for cracks.
Benefit: Short burst, big reduction in confirmation bias.
- Use the Traffic-Light Note
Create a simple note with three sections:
- Green – facts that support the thesis
- Yellow – uncertainties (e.g., regulatory risk)
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