Hello traders,
The day started like one of those days that could easily spook the markets.
The U.S. rolled out a fresh round of tariff letters, planning hefty new duties on copper and Brazilian imports. Fourteen countries got the notice, and financial media lit up with warnings about more trade wars on the horizon.
Honestly, a couple of years ago I would have been right there with the crowd, probably hammering puts or hiding in cash. But markets have a way of building scar tissue.
These days, they do not flinch as easily. By mid-morning, equity futures were holding firm.
Asia had already shrugged it off. Even Europe barely reacted.
That was my first big clue. Instead of racing for the exits, investors seemed tired of letting politics drive the bus.
I initiated modest positions and was strategically prepared to accommodate the range of potential market developments. If you’re tired of trading on edge, it’s probably your position size that’s failing you. I’ll show you how I fix it so losses stay small and winners run.
The truth is, days like this prove why you have to read beyond the headlines.
Markets had already priced in a ton of tariff risk. They were more interested in what the Fed would do next and whether earnings would hold up. By keeping trades balanced across futures, including gold, I stayed ready no matter which way the mood swung.
Oil caught my eye as well. OPEC was steady on output, yet prices faded. That felt like an invitation. Want to see exactly how I turned panic into profit, timing shorts on crude and catching the rebound in airlines – all by simply letting fear do the heavy lifting? This is how real edges are made.
That is what experience teaches you.
It is not about calling every move perfectly.
Trading is never about predicting with certainty. It is about preparing so well that when the market reveals its hand, you are already there. It is about managing your exposures so that even when the world throws another curveball, your game plan holds steady.
See you in the next one.
Imre Gams
Editor, The Trading Room