Tuesday, July 22, 2025

MY 22 RULES OF TRADING

 22 Rules of Trading

Author: Rujul Kamble


About the Author

Rujul Kamble is a passionate trader, national chess player, cricketer, and a student of market psychology. Despite being young, Rujul brings years of experience observing market behavior, testing strategies, and building a deep understanding of what separates successful traders from impulsive gamblers. His unique insights reflect a rare maturity for his age, and this book is a culmination of his 5+ years of trading study, mentorship, and real-world application.

With a keen eye for patterns and discipline honed through chess and sports, Rujul believes trading is not just about money — it's a mind game, a lifestyle, and a science. This book is for every aspiring trader who wants to develop a clear, disciplined, and successful approach to markets.


Table of Contents

  1. Plan Your Trade, Trade Your Plan

  2. Risk Only What You Can Afford to Lose

  3. Never Let a Profit Turn into a Loss

  4. Cut Your Losses Quickly

  5. Let Your Profits Run

  6. Avoid Overtrading

  7. Use Stop Losses Always

  8. Be Emotionless: Trade Logic, Not Feelings

  9. Trade with the Trend

  10. Keep a Trading Journal

  11. Never Average Down

  12. Understand Risk-Reward Ratio

  13. Do Not Chase the Market

  14. Stay Updated with Market News

  15. Avoid the Fear of Missing Out (FOMO)

  16. Don’t Trade Based on Tips

  17. Master One Strategy First

  18. Review Your Trades Weekly

  19. Don’t Overleverage

  20. Use Technical and Fundamental Analysis

  21. Take Breaks to Reset

  22. Always Keep Learning


Rule 1: Plan Your Trade, Trade Your Plan

Explanation:
A good trader does not jump into trades blindly. Every successful trade starts with a strategy — your entry point, stop-loss, target, and trade rationale must be clearly defined before entering the market. Once you’ve created a plan, stick to it no matter what emotions arise.

Why It Matters:
Markets are chaotic. Without a plan, emotions like fear, greed, and FOMO will take control. A written plan acts as your personal guide through uncertainty.

Real Example:
Suppose you're trading Reliance shares. You identify a breakout pattern at ₹2,500 and plan to buy at ₹2,505 with a stop-loss at ₹2,470 and target at ₹2,580. If the price hits ₹2,530 and starts falling, emotional traders might panic and exit. But a disciplined trader waits — because the stop-loss hasn’t been hit. And maybe later that day, it hits ₹2,580 — your profit target.

Action Tip:
Write down your plan before placing a trade. Set alerts for your stop-loss and targets. Never alter it during the trade unless a new plan is made.


Rule 2: Risk Only What You Can Afford to Lose

Explanation:
The golden rule in trading: Never risk your rent, EMI, or emergency fund in the market. Trading is a probability game, not a guarantee. Even the best traders lose sometimes.

Why It Matters:
If you’re emotionally attached to the money you're trading, you’ll make poor decisions. Fear of loss increases stress and clouds your thinking. When you can afford the loss, you trade calmly and smartly.

Real Example:
A trader named Aditya took a ₹1,00,000 loan to trade options. Within two weeks, he lost ₹80,000 and couldn’t sleep at night. Compare this to Riya, who traded only with ₹10,000 from her savings. She lost ₹2,000 but learned a lesson and stayed emotionally stable.

Action Tip:
Decide a trading capital that won’t disturb your life if lost. Usually, 2–5% of your monthly income or pocket money is a safe start.


Rule 3: Never Let a Profit Turn into a Loss

Explanation:
The market often gives you profit — then takes it back. It’s your job to protect your gains. If a trade is in profit, trail your stop-loss or book partial profits to secure some earnings.

Why It Matters:
Most new traders wait for ‘more profit’ and end up with losses. Greed causes delays in exiting, and reversals wipe out gains. Discipline means locking in profit smartly.

Real Example:
Suppose your intraday trade in TCS hits ₹3,700 after you entered at ₹3,650. You’re in ₹50 profit. But instead of trailing your stop to ₹3,680 or booking 50% profit, you wait. Then suddenly, market reverses due to US inflation news — and the stock drops to ₹3,600. You exit in loss. Lesson: profit vanished because of greed.

Action Tip:
Set a trailing stop-loss once your trade is 1:1 risk-reward positive. Or book 50% at target 1, then hold the rest with stop at entry.

๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 4: Cut Your Losses Quickly

๐Ÿ”น “Hope is not a strategy. When a trade goes wrong, exit fast.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
One of the biggest mistakes traders make is holding on to losing positions, hoping they’ll recover. The market doesn’t care about your hopes — it moves based on supply, demand, and news. A small loss is a bruise. A big one can be fatal to your account.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
Suppose you bought TATA Steel at ₹110 and your stop loss was ₹105. But it falls to ₹102 and you still hold, thinking it’ll bounce. Later, it drops to ₹95. You’ve now lost ₹15 per share. Had you respected the stop loss, the damage would be limited.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Set your stop loss before entering a trade, and never move it hoping for a recovery. Respect it like a seatbelt—it’s there to save your capital.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 5: Let Your Profits Run

๐Ÿ”น “Don't exit a winning trade too early. Ride the trend until the market tells you to exit.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
While traders panic in losses, they also rush to book small profits due to fear of reversal. This mindset limits growth. A good trade should be allowed to reach its full potential.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
You bought Infosys at ₹1,400, and it quickly moves to ₹1,430. You book profits. But by the day’s end, it's at ₹1,480. Why? Because the trend was strong. You exited too early because you didn’t trust your setup.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Use trailing stop-losses to lock in profit as the stock moves in your favor. This allows you to maximize gains without being greedy.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 6: Trade With the Trend

๐Ÿ”น “Trend is your friend—until it bends.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
Most losses happen when traders go against the prevailing trend. Whether it’s intraday or swing trading, you must first identify the trend and then trade in that direction.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
The Nifty is in a clear uptrend, forming higher highs and higher lows. But you try to short it, expecting a correction. Instead, it surges another 150 points and hits your stop loss. Fighting trends is like swimming against a river.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Use tools like moving averages, RSI, and trendlines to identify trends. If in doubt, stay out. Don’t fight the flow.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 7: Keep Emotions Out of Trading

๐Ÿ”น “The market is a battlefield — emotions are your biggest enemy.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
Greed leads to overtrading. Fear leads to hesitation. Anger leads to revenge trading. Hope leads to holding losing trades. Emotions distort your logic. That’s why the best traders operate like robots — focused, calm, and consistent.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
A trader loses ₹5,000 in a trade. In frustration, he takes another impulsive trade to recover. He loses ₹10,000 more. This is revenge trading caused by emotion.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Set rules and follow them regardless of how you feel. Keep a trading journal to track emotional decisions and improve discipline.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 8: Don’t Overtrade

๐Ÿ”น “More trades don’t mean more profits.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
Overtrading leads to poor decisions, stress, and unnecessary losses. Trading should be like sniping — wait patiently for the right shot, then act. Don’t trade just because the market is open.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
A trader takes 10 trades in one day, chasing every little move. Only 2 trades are good setups. The rest are based on noise. By the end, he's exhausted and in loss.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Quality over quantity. Define how many trades you’ll take in a day and stick to it. Take only high-probability trades based on your strategy.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 9: Know Your Risk-Reward Ratio

๐Ÿ”น “Always risk ₹1 to make at least ₹2 or ₹3.”

๐Ÿ“– Deep Explanation:
Trading without a proper risk-reward ratio is gambling. A good trader ensures the reward is at least twice the risk. This way, even if only half the trades are correct, the account grows.

๐Ÿ“Š Example:
If your stop loss is ₹10 below entry, your target should be ₹20-30 above. That way, 5 losses (₹-50) and 5 wins (₹+150) still give you a net profit of ₹100.

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:
Use a position size calculator before every trade. Stick to setups with at least a 1:2 risk-reward ratio. Avoid low R:R trades — they drain accounts over time.

๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 10: Avoid Revenge Trading

Explanation:
Revenge trading happens when a trader suffers a loss and immediately jumps into another trade to “win back” the lost money. This behavior is driven by emotion, not strategy. It's like a gambler doubling their bet after a loss — often leading to disaster.

Example:
Say you lost ₹5,000 on a trade. You feel angry and quickly enter another trade without analysis, just to recover. You ignore stop-losses or proper entry points — and now you’ve lost even more.
This creates a loss spiral.

Deep Insight:
The market doesn’t owe you anything. You must trade with a calm mind, not emotions. Accept the loss, step away, and review your mistake objectively. Revenge trading turns logical minds into emotional wrecks.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 11: Risk Only What You Can Afford to Lose

Explanation:
Never trade money you need for rent, school fees, or essentials. Trading is inherently risky. Only use disposable income that, if lost, won’t ruin your life.

Example:
If you have ₹10,000 saved for your school fees, and you use it in trading hoping to double it — that’s gambling. If you lose, it creates real-life stress. Instead, trade with money meant for learning or investing.

Deep Insight:
Successful traders know that capital protection > profit. Peace of mind is more powerful than chasing unrealistic gains.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 12: Master One Strategy Before Trying Many

Explanation:
New traders often jump between strategies (price action, indicators, swing trading, etc.) without mastering any. This creates confusion and inconsistency.

Example:
Imagine trying to play cricket, football, and chess all at once. You’ll be average at everything, master of none. Similarly, pick one trading strategy — like RSI + EMA crossover — and test it thoroughly.

Deep Insight:
Deep mastery in one area beats shallow knowledge in many. Confidence comes from consistency, not variety.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 13: Keep a Trading Journal

Explanation:
A trading journal tracks every trade: why you entered, your emotions, the result, and what you learned. This is your greatest teacher — better than any course.

Example Format:

DateEntryExitReasonEmotionMistakeLesson

Deep Insight:
A journal reveals your emotional patterns, your strengths, and weaknesses. It helps you evolve from “guessing” to “strategic decision-making”.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 14: Understand the Power of Compound Growth

Explanation:
Small, consistent gains compounded over time create wealth. Don't focus on daily jackpots. Focus on monthly and yearly performance.

Example:
If you make just 5% per month on ₹10,000, in one year with compounding, it becomes ₹17,958. That’s almost 80% return. Now imagine ₹1,00,000!

Deep Insight:
Trading isn’t a lottery. Think long-term. Like Warren Buffett said: "The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient."


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 15: Trade What You Understand

Explanation:
Never trade in stocks, options, or futures you don’t understand. If you don’t know the asset, its volatility, or price behavior — you’re just guessing.

Example:
If you only understand Nifty 50 stocks, but you buy a smallcap stock just because it’s trending, you may get stuck. If it crashes 20%, you won’t know what hit you.

Deep Insight:
Study the instrument before you trade it. Know the risk, average volatility, and how it reacts to news. Understand first. Profit later.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 16: Emotions are Your Biggest Enemy

Explanation:
Fear, greed, overconfidence, anxiety — all destroy logical decision-making. Successful traders are emotionally neutral. They don’t get too happy on wins or too sad on losses.

Example:
You see a sudden market spike and your greed kicks in — “I’ll miss the rally!” You enter late and lose. That’s FOMO — fear of missing out. It clouds your judgment.

Deep Insight:
Meditation, journaling, and discipline can help you master your emotions. Your mindset is more important than your setup.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 17: Don’t Trade Every Day

Explanation:
The market gives opportunities every day — but that doesn’t mean you should trade daily. Forced trades lead to mistakes. Only trade when the setup is perfect.

Example:
If your strategy works best during trending markets, but today’s a choppy sideways market, avoid trading. Wait. Be patient.

Deep Insight:
Sitting on your hands is also a trade. Avoiding a bad trade is as good as taking a winning trade

๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 18: Understand the News But Don’t Trade the News Blindly

Explanation:
News can shake the markets — earnings reports, Fed meetings, inflation data — all of these can move prices drastically. But trading just based on headlines is like driving by only looking at Instagram stories. You need context, preparation, and technical confirmation.

Example:
A stock's earnings come out positive, but the stock still crashes. Why? Because expectations were already baked in. This happens often — “buy the rumor, sell the news.”

Actionable Tip:

  • Always check the economic calendar.

  • Wait for the first 15–30 minutes post-news to let volatility settle.

  • Combine news with chart patterns for a more calculated trade.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 19: Avoid Revenge Trading — Emotions Are Expensive

Explanation:
You lost money on a trade, and now you’re out for vengeance. You double your lot size. You stop caring about rules. And you lose even more. That’s revenge trading.

Example:
A trader lost ₹2,000 in the morning, took an unplanned trade with ₹5,000 risk, and wiped out the week's profits. All because they wanted to "get it back."

Actionable Tip:

  • After a loss, take a break. Walk away.

  • Follow the “2-loser rule” — stop for the day after two back-to-back red trades.

  • Journal what triggered your revenge mindset.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 20: Consistency Beats Intensity

Explanation:
Trading is not about a one-time jackpot. It’s about showing up every day with discipline, managing risk, and making small wins add up.

Example:
A trader who targets ₹500/day with strict rules and hits that 15 days a month makes ₹7,500. Compare that to someone who aims for ₹5,000/day but only wins once and loses big five times. Consistency always wins.

Actionable Tip:

  • Build a daily routine: analysis → trade → journal.

  • Respect your edge, no matter how small.

  • Think in probabilities, not perfection.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 21: The Market is Always Right — Respect It

Explanation:
You may believe that a stock should go up. You might argue with indicators, patterns, or even global cues. But the market doesn’t care about your opinion. The chart is the ultimate truth.

Example:
Traders often try to "predict" the market. But smart traders "react" to what the chart says.

Actionable Tip:

  • Accept stop-loss hits without ego.

  • Don’t try to prove the market wrong.

  • When in doubt, zoom out — let the larger trend guide you.


๐Ÿ“˜ Rule 22: Keep Learning — Markets Evolve, So Should You

Explanation:
Markets change. New instruments emerge. Trading styles evolve. What worked last year may not work this year. The only way to survive and thrive is to keep learning.

Example:
A trader who only relied on moving averages in 2019 may have struggled in 2022’s volatile market. Those who adapted — by studying price action or options strategies — stayed in the game.

Actionable Tip:

  • Read books, attend webinars, follow top traders.

  • Revisit your strategies monthly and adapt.

  • Never assume you know enough.

.

Thursday, July 3, 2025

“How to Apply Stop Loss Like a Pro (Not a Loser)”

 



Stop Loss Mastery: From Fear to Power

๐Ÿ’ฅ Introduction

Most beginners treat stop loss like a backup plan.

Real traders use it like a weapon.

This blog will teach you how to apply stop loss like a smart sniper, not a scared gambler.


๐Ÿ”น What is Stop Loss (In 1 Line)?

A stop loss is your emergency exit—it saves your capital when the market turns against you.


๐Ÿง  Why Most Traders Fail at Stop Loss

  • Setting it too tight = kicked out early.

  • Setting it too wide = huge losses.

  • Not using it at all = blown account.

Let’s deep dive into these common mistakes:

❌ Setting SL Too Tight

New traders think: "If I lose only 0.5%, I’m safe."

Reality: The market needs breathing room. You’re getting stopped out unnecessarily.

❌ Setting SL Too Wide

“I’ll put a 10% SL and hope for reversal.”

Wrong. You're risking too much without logic. Emotional trading kills accounts.

❌ No Stop Loss = Dangerous Game

Without SL, you're gambling, not trading. One bad move can wipe your profits or your whole capital.


๐Ÿ”ฅ How to Apply Stop Loss Like a Bold Trader

✅ 1. Set SL Based on Logic, Not Emotion

Use market structure:

  • Below support

  • Above resistance

  • Outside volatility range

✘ Wrong: “Let me just keep 1% stop loss.” ✔ Right: “I’ll place SL below this demand zone.”

✅ 2. Use Risk % – Not Rupees

Always define:

  • How much you're ready to lose (risk %)

  • Position size accordingly

๐Ÿ’ก Example:

"Risk ₹500 to make ₹1500."

This helps maintain risk-reward ratio.

✅ 3. Follow the ‘Sniper Rule’

Don’t enter randomly. Wait for:

  • Pattern confirmation

  • Volume spike

  • Breakout with retest

Then strike like a sniper.

SL is your safety net—not your fear trigger.

✅ 4. SL is Power, Not Weakness

Most think SL is a lack of confidence. But setting a stop loss means:

  • You respect capital

  • You follow strategy

  • You avoid emotional exits

Real winners are risk managers first, profit makers second.


๐Ÿงช The Psychology Behind Stop Loss

Fear of Missing Out (FOMO)

Traders don’t set SL thinking they’ll miss profits. Truth: A missed opportunity is better than a wiped-out account.

Revenge Trading

After hitting SL, some traders re-enter blindly. Stop. Breathe. Review.

SL hit? Learn why. Don’t double down emotionally.

Hope = Dangerous Emotion

Many traders hold losing trades, hoping for reversal.

Hope has no place in disciplined trading.


๐Ÿ“Š Examples of Strategic Stop Loss Placement

Example 1: Support-Based SL

Stock: ABC Ltd. Entry: ₹120 Support: ₹115 SL: ₹114 (below support)

Example 2: Trendline SL

Stock: XYZ Ltd. Trendline: Rising Entry: ₹200 SL: ₹192 (below trendline)

Example 3: Volatility Stop

Use ATR (Average True Range) to place SL.

SL = Entry - 1.5 * ATR

More accurate. Less emotional.


๐Ÿ“˜ Tools to Help You Place Better SL

  • ATR Indicator

  • Supertrend (for trailing SL)

  • Fibonacci Levels

  • Pivot Points

  • Trendlines & Chart Patterns

Use tools to build SL logic.


⚖️ Risk-Reward Ratio: Why SL Completes the Trade

Every trade should answer:

  • How much can I lose?

  • How much can I gain?

Minimum RR: 1:2

Risk ₹500 to make ₹1000 = Good Trade Risk ₹500 to make ₹300 = Better Trade Risk ₹500 to make ₹200 = Skip It!


๐Ÿ”„ Stop Loss and Trailing SL

What is Trailing Stop Loss?

When trade moves in your favor, shift SL to lock in profits.

E.g., Entry: ₹100 | SL: ₹95 Price moves to ₹110 → New SL: ₹102

This protects gains and reduces risk.


๐Ÿ“‰ Common SL Myths Busted

❌ Myth 1: SL always hits

Fact: SL hits when it’s placed wrong. Use structure, not guesses.

❌ Myth 2: SL is for weak traders

Fact: SL is the shield of professionals.

❌ Myth 3: Market makers hit SL on purpose

Fact: That’s just poor SL placement most of the time.


๐Ÿงญ SL in Different Trading Styles

Intraday

  • SL must be tight & quick.

  • Use 1-2% capital risk.

Swing Trading

  • Use chart patterns & support/resistance.

  • Risk 3-5% based on timeframe.

Options Trading

  • SL based on premium decay or delta shift.

  • Always use mental or physical SL.


๐Ÿš€ Advance SL Strategies

Heiken Ashi + ATR SL

  • Smooth trend with calculated stop.

SL at EMA Levels

  • 20 EMA or 50 EMA often act as dynamic SL zones.

SL Using Volume Profile

  • Place SL below high-volume zones.


๐Ÿ”š Final Words

Real traders don’t fear losses — they control them.

A good stop loss isn’t the reason you fail. A missing stop loss is.


Quick Recap:

  • SL is your safety net, not your cage

  • Use market structure for SL

  • Always define risk %

  • Trade like a sniper, not a gambler

  • Respect your capital

Protect Capital. Play Bold. Trade Smart.


#stay tuned for more updates as we are on the journey to become billionaires ๐Ÿ’ธ

Follow us for more smart trading blogs, setups, and power strategies. ๐Ÿš€

Friday, June 27, 2025

๐Ÿ’ผ The Mindset of a Successful Trader: More Than Just Charts and Candles

 



Page 1: Introduction

Trading is not just about charts and candlesticks. It's about psychology, discipline, and mindset. While many obsess over finding the perfect strategy, the truth is that success lies in mastering your emotions and behavior.

"A trader's edge isn't just in indicators or tips—it's in their thinking."


Page 2: The 80/20 Rule of Trading

Successful trading is 80% mindset and only 20% strategy. Why? Because the market constantly changes, but your ability to remain calm, disciplined, and adaptive determines your long-term success.

  • Strategies can be copied.

  • Indicators can be learned.

  • But mindset must be built.


Page 3: Common Myths About Trading

  1. Trading is easy money – False.

  2. One strategy fits all – Wrong.

  3. You can beat the market daily – Unrealistic.

Truth: "Trading is a skill, not a shortcut."


Page 4: Trait 1 – Discipline

Discipline is your superpower in the markets. Without it, even the best setups will fail. Discipline means:

  • Following your strategy.

  • Respecting stop-loss.

  • Not trading out of boredom.


Page 5: Trait 2 – Emotional Control

A trader must control emotions like:

  • Greed ("I’ll hold it a bit longer")

  • Fear ("What if it crashes?")

  • Revenge ("I’ll win it all back in one trade")

Emotional traders are always one step from disaster.


Page 6: Trait 3 – Patience

Patience separates gamblers from traders.

  • Wait for the right setup.

  • Let winners run.

  • Don’t enter just to feel active.


Page 7: Trait 4 – Risk Management

Good traders think: “How much can I lose?”

  • Risk per trade: max 1–2% of capital

  • Position sizing: essential

  • Never average a losing trade


Page 8: Trait 5 – Continuous Learning

Markets evolve. So should you.

  • Study new patterns

  • Learn from every trade

  • Attend webinars, read books, journal

Never stop being a student of the market.


Page 9: How I Approach Trading Daily

  1. Pre-market global analysis

  2. Mark support/resistance zones

  3. Use VWAP + RSI + price action

  4. Entry after confirmation only

  5. Journaling after market closes


Page 10: My Rules for Entry and Exit

  • Clear breakout/breakdown

  • Volume confirmation

  • Entry near support/resistance zone

  • Stop-loss predefined

  • Exit partially at 1:2 risk-reward


Page 11: Building a Winning Strategy

A good strategy must have:

  • Simplicity

  • Backtested performance

  • Clear rules

  • Risk-to-reward clarity

Don’t chase signals. Build conviction.


Page 12: Journaling and Reflection

Every pro trader keeps a trading journal. Include:

  • Entry/exit reasons

  • Trade outcome

  • What went wrong/right

  • Emotions felt during trade


Page 13: Mistakes I Made Early On

  • Overtrading

  • No stop-loss

  • Blindly copying others

  • Trading to prove something

  • Ignoring news/events


Page 14: How I Corrected Them

  • Set a rule: max 2 trades/day

  • Always predefine stop-loss

  • Use my own logic

  • Journal everything


Page 15: Psychology of a Losing Streak

What happens:

  • Doubt sets in

  • Over-analysis

  • Revenge trading

What I do:

  • Take 1–2 day break

  • Read past winning trades

  • Meditate, re-center


Page 16: Psychology of a Winning Streak

What happens:

  • Overconfidence

  • Risking more

  • Neglecting rules

My fix:

  • Stick to risk management

  • Take partial profits

  • Be humble, not greedy


Page 17: Tools I Use

  • TradingView for charting

  • Moneycontrol for news

  • Sensibull for options

  • Telegram/Discord for ideas (but filter wisely)


Page 18: My Weekly Trading Ritual

  • Sunday: Analyze past week

  • Plan next week's levels

  • Set goals (Profit target, # of trades)

  • Review mistakes


Page 19: How Chess Helped Me Trade

As a national chess player, I learned:

  • Strategy + Patience

  • Calculated risk

  • Predicting opponent’s move = predicting market traps


Page 20: When NOT to Trade

  • During high volatility news (Fed, RBI, Budget)

  • After a big win or big loss

  • When mentally disturbed

Not trading is also a trading decision.


Page 21: Inspirations & Mentors

  • Jesse Livermore

  • Rakesh Jhunjhunwala

  • Steve Burns

  • My trading mentors on YouTube


Page 22: Telegram & Tip Channels

  • Use only for ideas

  • Don’t follow blindly

  • Always analyze yourself

Your money, your responsibility.


Page 23: Final Trading Wisdom

  • Market is a mirror—shows you your real mindset

  • Greed kills. Fear delays. Ego destroys.

  • Consistency > Accuracy

  • Focus on process, not profits


Page 24: My Trading Motto

“Plan your trade. Trade your plan.”

  • No impulsive trades

  • Only quality setups

  • Always accept losses gracefully


Page 25: Final Word to Aspiring Traders

You don’t need to trade every day. You need to trade the right way.

Build:

  • Strong habits

  • A stable mindset

  • A clean plan

Trading is not a sprint. It’s a marathon of the mind.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

๐Ÿ“ˆ 5 Stocks Under ₹50 That Are Good for Beginners – Budget Picks With Big Potential!

 


Are you new to investing? Think you need thousands to begin? Think again!
Welcome to the world of budget-friendly stocks—handpicked for beginners like YOU. If you're starting your stock market journey and don't want to risk a big amount, these five stocks under ₹50 could be your gateway to smart investing.


๐Ÿ’ก Why Start With Low-Priced Stocks?

  • ✅ Low risk, low entry point

  • ✅ Learn market behavior hands-on

  • ✅ Perfect for SIP (Systematic Investment Plan)

  • ✅ Opportunity to invest in growing companies

Now, let’s jump into our exciting picks under ₹50!


1. IRFC – Indian Railway Finance Corporation (₹40–₹50 range)

Sector: Government / Infrastructure
Why Beginners Love It:
IRFC is a PSU that helps Indian Railways with finances. It has consistent profits, good dividend history, and strong government backing.
Ideal For: Long-term, low-risk investors.

๐Ÿ”น Fun Fact: IRFC is one of the only railway financing arms in India—making it a monopoly player!


2. Suzlon Energy (₹30–₹45 range)

Sector: Renewable Energy
Why It’s Trending:
Suzlon has made a strong comeback in the green energy space. With the global shift to sustainable energy, Suzlon is regaining investor confidence.
Ideal For: High-potential risk-takers.

๐Ÿ”น Pro Tip: Keep an eye on quarterly profits before adding more.


3. South Indian Bank (₹25–₹35 range)

Sector: Banking
Why It’s a Smart Pick:
South Indian Bank is restructuring its operations and digital presence. With increasing loan disbursement and improving NPA numbers, this bank may surprise everyone soon.
Ideal For: Banking enthusiasts who want to learn how financial institutions grow.


4. Vodafone Idea (₹12–₹15 range)

Sector: Telecom
Why It's Still on the Radar:
Though under pressure, Vi is restructuring and aiming for a turnaround. The company is seeking funding, and with 5G on the rise, the gamble could pay off.
Ideal For: High-risk investors with a long-term view.


5. Yes Bank (₹18–₹25 range)

Sector: Private Banking
Why It's Worth Watching:
Once troubled, Yes Bank is now under new management and recovering slowly. It's increasing its retail focus and reducing bad loans.
Ideal For: Learners who want to understand bank turnarounds.


๐Ÿ› ️ How would you start to invest in this stocks?

  1. Open a Demat account with platforms like Zerodha, Groww, or Upstox.

  2. Start with ₹100–₹500.

  3. Research and set alerts on stock movements.

  4. Invest slowly—track news and quarterly reports.


๐Ÿง  Final Thoughts: Cheap Doesn’t Mean Weak

Just because a stock is under ₹50 doesn’t mean it’s “penny trash.” Many of these companies are on the road to revival and have long-term potential.

๐Ÿ’ฌ "Smart investors don't time the market, they spend time in the market."

"stay tuned for more updates if you want to be a billionaire # not shortly but step by step."



Wednesday, June 25, 2025

๐Ÿงพ : How I Started Trading in India with Just ₹100


 



๐Ÿ’ฌ Introduction:
Most people think trading is only for the rich or people with big savings. But what if I told you that you can start trading in India with just ₹100? Yes, it's true — I did it, and in this blog, I’ll show you exactly how you can too.
๐Ÿ’ก Is It Really Possible to Trade with ₹100?
Yes! Many new-age trading platforms allow you to start investing or trading with as low as ₹100. You don’t need ₹10,000 or even ₹1,000 to begin. All you need is:
A smartphone
PAN card & Aadhaar
₹100 in your UPI/bank account
๐Ÿ“ฒ Best Apps to Start Trading with ₹100:
Here are some beginner-friendly apps where you can create a Demat account for free:
Dhan – Simple UI, perfect for beginners.
Groww – Invest in stocks and mutual funds.
Upstox – Offers ₹100 stocks and learning resources.
๐Ÿ’ก Tip: You can also earn money by referring your friends to these apps.
๐Ÿ“‰ What Can You Do With ₹100?
Here’s how I used my ₹100 in the beginning:
Bought penny stocks like Suzlon or RPower (under ₹50 per share)
Tried mutual funds with ₹100 SIP
Learned how market moves using small capital (less risk, more learning)
๐Ÿ‘จ‍๐Ÿ’ป My First Experience:
I deposited ₹100 into my Dhan account. I bought 2 shares of a small company and watched the chart. Within 3 days, I made ₹6 profit. Not a lot, but the happiness of earning from the stock market was unmatched!
⚠️ Beginner’s Warning:
Don’t expect to become rich instantly
Use ₹100 to learn, not to gamble
Avoid tips from fake Telegram groups
✅ Final Words:
Starting small is better than not starting at all. I began with ₹100, and now I’m confident to trade with bigger amounts. You can start your journey today — safely and smartly.
"In trading, even a small win teaches a big lesson."
๐Ÿ”— Bonus: Want to Learn More?

In my next blog, I’ll share “5 Stocks Under ₹50 That Are Good for Beginners.” Stay tuned if you want to a billionaire but not shortly but step by step .


MY 22 RULES OF TRADING

  22 Rules of Trading Author: Rujul Kamble About the Author Rujul Kamble is a passionate trader, national chess player, cricketer, and a stu...