π Why Overtrading Feels Productive but Destroys Accounts
π Why Overtrading Feels Productive but Destroys Accounts
π― The Lesson
Youβre in front of the screen all day.
You see setups everywhere.
You take ten trades β win some, lose some β and end the day exhausted, with little to show.
Thatβs overtrading: working hard, not smart.
It feels productive, but it quietly drains your capital.
βοΈ Step 1: The Math Behind the Problem
Every trade costs money β spread, commission, slippage.
Even if you only lose 0.2R per bad setup, ten random trades equal β2R of damage.
Thatβs the same as losing two good setups without ever getting one high-quality entry.
Example:
π Step 2: The β3-Trade Ruleβ
Professionals limit their daily activity.
If you lose three trades in one session, you stop β no exceptions.
This caps your daily loss and forces focus.
Example:
If your systemβs edge is real, fewer trades = cleaner results.
π‘ Step 3: Filter by Quality, Not Quantity
Use a checklist before every trade:
β
Is trend clear?
β
Is stop loss logical (not emotional)?
β
Is R:R above 1:1.5?
β
Is volatility stable?
If you answer βnoβ to any β skip it.
Skipping bad trades is still good trading.
π Step 4: Think Like a Business
Each trade is a business expense.
Would you spend $200 on something without knowing if it works?
Then donβt risk it on a random candle.
Quality control is your profit engine.
π Takeaway
Overtrading gives the illusion of progress but guarantees fatigue and losses.
Trade less, analyze more, and your account β and mind β will both grow stronger.
π’ Join my MQL5 channel for more trading & risk-management insights:
π https://www.mql5.com/en/channels/issam_kassas