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PropGuard

@PropGuardApp

Most traders don’t realise they’re about to fail.. Until it’s too late. Track drawdown, daily loss & discipline in real time. 👇 https://t.co/szIrkTLuZJ

London, UK เข้าร่วม Şubat 2026
42 กำลังติดตาม33 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
If you trade prop firms, rule breaches are the biggest account killer. Trailing drawdown Daily loss Consistency limits PropGuard tracks these in real time so you know before you breach. propguard.co
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@Corleone_Trades Professional risk management is about knowing when the edge isn't present. One quality trade Beats five forced setups that chew through your buffer and mental capital.
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Corleone
Corleone@Corleone_Trades·
Nothing for me this morning. No draw for shorts. No trigger (my system) for longs. Simple. No trade. A quiet week for me but a good one because i have no fomo and i am following my system. 1 Trade (Yesterday) 1 Win. This is professional trading. $NQ
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@CTtradesUSA @Topstep Nothing beats that peace of mind. Removing the manual choice to 'take just one more' is how you scale. Most fail because they can't walk away; engineering your environment to force that walk is a top-tier risk management habit.
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CTTrades
CTTrades@CTtradesUSA·
Best sleep I’ve had is being locked out. Went up $1000 in Asia and loved myself out to prevent giving it back. Also locked myself until 5 mins after NY open so I am forced to wait. @Topstep
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@vedictrades Stacking builds a risk buffer of realized gains. That cushion allows you to trade with zero pressure, which ironically leads to the bigger setups you were originally chasing.
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Sahil
Sahil@vedictrades·
Small payouts compound into something real. $1K here. $1.5K there. Stack 6 months of that and you've built something most "traders" never will — actual consistent income. Stop chasing. Start stacking.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@mTraderNDX Discipline isn't just following a strategy; it’s managing the emotional friction after a loss. In prop firms, the hard cap on drawdowns means a 5-minute lapse in judgment can erase months of steady progress.
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mTraderNDX
mTraderNDX@mTraderNDX·
Most blown accounts didn’t die from the market they died from one more trade one more try one more revenge.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@josh__ekwunife Backtesting for win rate ignores the 'slippage of the mind.' Execution errors and latency are the silent killers of theoretical models. Profit Factor tells the real story of how a strategy actually survives market friction.
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josh.xl
josh.xl@josh__ekwunife·
I saw this post yesterday but I couldn't react to it because of a glitch. Interestingly, it appeared on my TL again today. So here's my view. The best way to view "win rate" is to see it as a POTENTIAL. And because potentials are unlimited, it means any strategy can have a 100% win rate. But you know what's also true about potentials? Not all potentials are realized. It simply means, although a strategy has (can have a) 100% win rate, the big question however is, can you realize it? Realizing the full potential of a trading system hangs on many variables which include: mental state, market condition, poor Internet connection which can create poor execution or lagging trading view chart, human tendencies, broker's discrepancy in price, trading conditions for those who trade prop firm. I can go on and on in listing several variables that affect the realization of a system's win rate. And because the earlier listed variables will not always be 100%, that's exactly why one can't realize the full potential of a system even though it's got 100% win rate. So when you see someone say, "my system has an 80% win rate," he is just expressing poor understanding of what a win rate is. How do you come up with a constant, "80% win rate," when the things that can make your statement to be true are all VARIABLES? If you understand what I've hitherto written, you'd see that win-rate is just a cliche used by marketers to draft more students, and a statement used by Traders just to feel good about themselves or whatever thing they're trading. Even more sorry, to those who backtest their system just to know the win rate of the system. They go as far as gathering 100 and even more dataset just to know their win rate. What a way to show ignorance! Dear Trader, what you need is Profit Factor (Profit Score). Selah!
Jêññîfer💖✨✨@jennyslayer01

Hey.... Traders Is it possible to have 90% win rate??? If no why do you think so don't you think there's a strategy that gives you such possibility

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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@CryptoDefiLord In a green week, you're looking to protect the cushion; in a red week, the goal is survival. Many fail because they try to 'revenge trade' their way back to break-even using the same size.
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CryptoLord NE 📊📈
CryptoLord NE 📊📈@CryptoDefiLord·
The risk management you use when you are having a profitable week is always different from when you are having a bad trading week.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@j_intradaytrade Scaling is a technicality, not a strategy change. I see many traders fail funded challenges because they focus on the payout target rather than the expectancy of their edge. If the process is solid, the math handles the rest.
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J
J@j_intradaytrade·
The biggest mental shift I ever made in trading: Stopping caring about the dollar amount When I was trading a $5k account and catching 20R in a week, I was making $1,000 Now when I catch 30R it's obviously way more But the PROCESS is identical The setups are identical The risk management is identical Nothing changed except the account size If you can't make R on a small account, adding more money won't fix that But if you CAN make R consistently, scaling is just a matter of time and discipline
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@gerti_trader The psychological urge to 'end on a win' causes massive over-leveraging on Fridays. Real pros know that protecting your capital for Monday is more important than a last-minute hail mary trade.
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Gerti
Gerti@gerti_trader·
Remember, folks: Friday is the day most traders blow up their accounts. Don’t be one of them.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@Topstep Successful risk management is about being indifferent to the outcome of a single trade. If you feel the need for revenge, you’re likely over-leveraged and too attached to the dollar sign.
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Topstep
Topstep@Topstep·
Revenge is a dish best served cold…except in trading. Don't let one bad trade lead to many.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@asentimothee Correct. However, the psychological trap is trying to repeat that windfall every month. Sustainability in this game comes from treating those outsized wins as outliers, not the baseline.
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Timothée
Timothée@asentimothee·
Everyone thinks you're broke until one trade pays more than their Monthly salary.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@lordzitu Survival is the strategy. Most traders fail because they confuse their analysis with their identity. Once the thesis is invalidated, the only logical move is to flat the position immediately.
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Lordzitu
Lordzitu@lordzitu·
One of the biggest traps in trading is the need to be right. Ego pushes traders to hold losing positions longer than they should. But markets don’t reward ego. They reward flexibility. Good traders exit quickly when invalidated and move on without emotional attachment. Because survival matters more than being right.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@CableAnalyst This is why a rigid trading plan is vital. When the rules are objective, the influence of others' opinions drops to zero. If the criteria are met, the trade is a statistical necessity, not a choice.
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Ola Daniel🔌
Ola Daniel🔌@CableAnalyst·
Refusing to take your trade simply because you came online and saw that another trader’s point of interest is different from yours shows a lack of conviction and understanding. Trading is not about copying perspectives, it is about building a structured approach that you can consistently rely on. If your setup meets your rules, your edge, and your risk parameters, then it deserves to be executed regardless of what anyone else is doing. Every trader sees the market differently because of experience, strategy, timeframe, and psychology. What works for one trader may not work for you, and that is completely normal. Growth in trading comes from testing your ideas, trusting your process, and taking responsibility for your outcomes. The moment you start abandoning your analysis for someone else’s, you delay your development and remain dependent instead of becoming truly skilled. HAVE A MIND OF YOUR OWN 🔌
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@financegeeek Real freedom is decoupling your income from time. In prop trading, that means shifting focus from signal chasing to building a scalable risk framework that funds your life without the 12-hour screen sessions.
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Finance Geek
Finance Geek@financegeeek·
Focus on how you can make your parents enjoy the fruits of your hardwork before they die. Focus on how you too, can travel to anywhere, and trade from there knowing your trades will handle your expenses there. Delete all these other noise from your brain bro.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@Marresecira Structure is the only thing that offsets the emotional volatility of high-stakes trading. I'd add that documentation must include the 'why' behind skips, not just the trades taken.
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Cira Marrese ×͜×
Cira Marrese ×͜×@Marresecira·
My trading routine is built around structure: • Morning reset (training + clarity) • Market analysis • Patience during monitoring • Execution only after confirmation • Documentation and journaling • Reflection Discipline outside the charts reflects discipline on them. Gm
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@MoneyQuotesX But that focus must be on the right metrics. If you spend a year obsessing over PnL instead of execution quality, you're standing still. Changing your life requires shifting focus from the outcome to the system.
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Money Quotes
Money Quotes@MoneyQuotesX·
Most people are one year of focus away from a different life.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@TradersConf Paralysis often comes from attaching your self-worth to the equity curve after a win. If your bias is right but your SL is hit, it’s a volatility adjustment issue, not a skill issue. Step back and re-calibrate your ATR-based stops.
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Traders Confessions
Traders Confessions@TradersConf·
Think I'm experiencing my first 'paralysis by analysis' traders block. If that even exists. Ever since I got my first payout, it's been a down hill for me. I'm not blaming the market but myself. I dunno if I'm being too hard on myself but feels like I lost my edge over last few weeks. My SL gets hit first then original TP gets hit. That infuritates me more. I'd rather lose a trade because I was wrong than my original bias was right. Is it possible to overcome this?
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@tradermike1234 The psychology of a higher win rate with 1:1 is underrated. It prevents the revenge trading cycles that usually kill prop accounts when waiting for a 3:1 runner that never hits the target.
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Trader Mike
Trader Mike@tradermike1234·
You would grow your account 10X faster if you traded 1:1 risk reward
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@KINGKLC001 That confusion is actually your brain mapping out market edge cases. Structured discipline only works when you've felt the pain of a drawdown and understand why the risk parameters exist in the first place.
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KINGKLC…👑
KINGKLC…👑@KINGKLC001·
In trading you must Start with losses, confusion, and doubt... before it’ll turn to structure, discipline, and results. There’s no shortcut bro
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@CRTwithSaint The psychological shift from 'nothing to lose' to 'protecting the allocation' is where most fail. Your edge doesn't change, but your risk tolerance absolutely must.
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Saint
Saint@CRTwithSaint·
I swear getting funded is overrated. Staying funded is the real skill.
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PropGuard
PropGuard@PropGuardApp·
@ImreSG Betting vs. Scaling. Gamblers focus on the payout; traders focus on the risk-of-ruin. If your risk per trade is inconsistent based on 'feeling,' you're just playing a high-stakes slot machine.
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Imre Gams
Imre Gams@ImreSG·
Most accounts I come across are gamblers. Not traders. Difference? Traders have a systematic perspective and approach to speculation. Gamblers are focused on the next bet they can place. There are rich and poor gamblers. Young and old. There are no rich and old gamblers.
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