🇸🇬 From 50% Loss to Consistent Profits: Have You Mastered 4 Simple Rules?

In the Singapore market, many investors follow a familiar, painful path:

Buying based on "hot tips," chasing rallies, and doubling down on losing positions. It starts with a stock at $2.50, and by the time it hits $0.80, you’re fully loaded and trapped.

Losing money isn't a matter of luck; it’s a matter of "the system." By deconstructing the logic of successful traders, we’ve identified 4 core habits that can fundamentally change your trading trajectory. No magic indicators—just iron discipline.

1️⃣ Never Fight the Trend: Stop the "Bottom-Fishing" Illusion

The most persistent delusion for retail investors is trying to "guess the bottom."

The Old Trap: Buying a dip just because it "looks cheap."

The New Rule: Trade only in an uptrend. Let go of the obsession with catching the absolute bottom. When you follow the trend, you’ll find that "making profit" becomes significantly easier.

2️⃣ Volume Confirmation: Decoding the "Fakeout" Trap

Many times you think a stock is taking off, but it’s actually a bull trap.

The Old Trap: Rushing in the moment the price breaks resistance.

The New Rule: No Volume = No Breakthrough. A price breakout without trading volume is highly likely to be a trap. The principle is simple: Breakout + High Volume = Consideration. Otherwise, pass. This one rule helps filter out 80% of losing trades.

3️⃣ Risk First: Think About the Downside, Not the Upside

This is the true dividing line between professionals and amateurs.

The Old Trap: "How much can I make on this trade?"

The New Rule: "What is the maximum I can lose?"

Set an ironclad rule: Exit immediately if a single trade hits a 2% loss. It sounds simple, but very few have the discipline to do it. Once you accept that "loss is a cost of business," you ensure you are never "kicked out of the game."

4️⃣ Strategic Inactivity: Staying Flat is a Position

The Old Trap: Feeling like "not trading" is a wasted opportunity.

The New Rule: No Signal = No Order.

During the SGX pullbacks last year, the real winners were those who reduced positions or stayed in cash. They didn't predict the future; they simply chose to sit still when there was no setup that met their criteria.

Discussion

On your trading journey, which stage are you currently stuck on?

A. Bottom-fishing addiction (Always feeling it hasn't dropped enough)

B. No Stop-Loss (Hoping it will eventually bounce back)

C. Over-trading (Feeling itchy if you don't trade for a day)

D. Falling for Fakeouts (Getting trapped right after buying the breakout)

Share your experience in the comments!

# 🇸🇬 From 50% Loss to Consistent Profits: Have You Mastered 4 Simple Rules?

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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  • Shyon
    ·00:16
    TOP
    I’d say I used to be stuck between A and B—trying to catch the bottom while refusing to cut losses. I told myself a stock was “cheap” at every level down, adding more as it fell. In reality, I wasn’t investing—I was averaging into a mistake and hoping time would fix it.

    What changed for me was shifting focus from upside to risk. Once I started respecting stop-losses and accepting small losses early, everything became clearer. I stopped needing to be right on every trade and instead focused on staying in the game.

    Now I lean much more on discipline—waiting for trend and volume confirmation. If there’s no clean setup, I’m comfortable doing nothing. Ironically, trading less has improved my results the most.

    @Tiger_SG @TigerStars @TigerClub @Tiger_comments

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    • koolgal
      Same here.😟
      8 minutes ago
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    • ShyonReplying toicycrystal
      Thanks yo
      13 minutes ago
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    • icycrystalReplying toShyon
      [Like] [Like] [Like]
      09:23
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  • koolgal
    ·05:23
    TOP
    🌟Trading is supposed to be about strategy but sometimes it feels more like a rescue mission. I must confess that I have a Bottom Fishing Addiction.

    It is a seductive habit.  You see a big name that has been absolutely pummelled - down 40%, 60% or even 80%. While the rest of the market is running away, I am  stepping in, convinced that I have found the bargain of a lifetime.

    How I am fixing my addiction:

    I am learning to stop being a hero.  My new rule: No base, no trade. I am forcing myself to wait for the stock to stop making new lows & actually trade sideways for a while - showing that the sellers are  exhausted.

    I am also waiting for the price to cross back above its 20 day moving average before I think of touching it. It is better to buy a stock at USD 55 that is actually moving up than a bargain at USD 50 that is still falling.

    It takes humility to admit that a cheap stock can always get cheaper. I am still a work in progress.

    @Tiger_SG @Tiger_comments @TigerStars

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    • koolgalReplying toicycrystal
      Appreciate your support 🥰🥰🥰
      9 minutes ago
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    • koolgalReplying toicycrystal
      Thanks 😍😍😍
      9 minutes ago
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    • koolgalReplying toShyon
      Appreciate your support 🥰🥰🥰
      9 minutes ago
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  • icycrystal
    ·09:22
    TOP

    If I had to pick, D (Falling for Fakeouts) is the most common "technical" trap, while B (No Stop-Loss) is the biggest account killer.


    Most people get stuck on B because it’s an emotional hurdle, not a technical one. It’s that "hope" that turns a small mistake into a long-term "investment."

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    • koolgal
      May we overcome this together .💪💪💪
      7 minutes ago
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  • L.Lim
    ·09:33
    My problem has to be bottom fishing, although I have slowly worked to change that, buying when it starts going back up does make sense in some context.
    But with the donald doing his manipulation, upswings can happen randomly, and the next big crash could just be a couple of days away even with what looks like days of recovery.
    Buying reliable stocks helps though, I am happy to not gamble on anything that glitters.
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  • RXU
    ·08:29
    this post is really relatable. only trade a good set up. repeat to myself few more times. and this can be achieved with the learning points mentioned in this post. it is that simple but usually it is the simple stuff that are the hardest to do. i think the reminder to not time a bottom and to trade with the trend will help me alot! Thanks for this post
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  • 北极篂
    ·07:12
    如果一定要选阶段,我觉得很多人都卡在B和C之间:不止损,又忍不住一直交易。这两个不改,再好的策略也没用。
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  • 北极篂
    ·07:12
    还有一点,是很多人做不到的——止损。不是不会设,而是不愿意认错。其实交易里最贵的不是亏损,而是“不肯止损”。当你接受亏损只是成本的一部分,反而会轻松很多。


    最后一点反而最难:学会不交易。市场大部分时间是没有机会的,硬做只会把利润吐回去。空仓,本身也是一种选择。
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  • 北极篂
    ·07:12
    第二个很关键的是成交量。很多所谓“突破”,其实都是假动作。如果只是价格上去了,但量没跟上,大概率就是诱多。我现在基本有个原则:没量不追,宁愿错过,也不去赌。
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  • 北极篂
    ·07:12
    我自己最大的转变,是从“想赚多少”,变成“先想会亏多少”。这听起来很简单,但真的做到之后,整个交易逻辑都会变。比如以前很喜欢抄底,总觉得已经跌很多了,应该差不多了。但市场不会因为你觉得便宜就反转,很多时候只是从便宜变更便宜。后来我干脆放弃猜底,只做趋势向上的票,虽然买不到最低,但胜率明显高很多。
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  • I have to say bottom fishing, especially with the volatile market these days, it always seems that prices can go even lower, just to see them rebound and missing a great buying opportunity....
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  • 北极篂
    ·07:11
    如果回头看,大多数人在新加坡市场亏钱,其实不是选股问题,而是“习惯问题”。从听消息买、追高、补仓,到最后被套在0.80,这条路太典型了,本质就是没有一套能长期执行的规则。
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  • I've to say B. Although I have a trading plan, my emotions gets the better of me causing me to hang on while I should have bailed out. Things have started to improve lately and I have managed to start to respect the stop loss. This is after being forced to become "long term investor" (bag holder) for a few counters.
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  • Chrishust
    ·04:02
    A bottom fishing addiction: it is difficult to distinguish value from low growth stocks
    b. No stop loss: it is difficult to apply stop loss since changes could be structural or temporary
    C. Overtrading: my issues are undertrading
    D falling or fakeouts: I do not adequately assess high growth stocks
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  • highhand
    ·00:16
    C. I have got an itchy bottom. can't sit still and do nothing. everyday must trade. so I have to learn options where you can trade when market is up down or sideways. all conditions also ok.  but still keep my long term holdings and compound
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  • Mrzorro
    ·42 minutes ago
    Actually I been through A,B,C,D, but I still stuck at B. No stop loss. Always hope that the stock will rebound or recover [Spurting]
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  • AliceSam
    ·06:56
    跟随趋势时,你会发现“盈利”变得容易得多。
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  • AN88
    ·07:30
    b
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