Why I Refuse to Give Stock Tips: The Comfort Zone Trap

 

If you are a profitable trader, your inbox and direct messages are always full of the same questions: "What looks good right now? Should I buy this? What are your tips for tomorrow?"

My answer is always a polite but firm refusal. I do not tell anyone what to buy or sell.

People often assume I withhold tips because I want to keep the "secrets" to myself. That is completely false. The real reason I refuse to give stock recommendations is a harsh psychological truth: Even if I give you the perfect setup, human psychology will prevent you from executing it correctly.

Let me share two real-life examples that perfectly illustrate why providing tips to untrained traders is a complete waste of time.

Real-World Example 1: The ABC Stock Paradox

Some time ago, an acquaintance came to me and asked, "What is your view on this ABC stock? I am looking to buy it right now." I pulled up the chart. The stock was trading at ₹150. It just had a bounce in a negative structure, everyone was talking about it, and the news was overwhelmingly positive. But the technical structure told a different story. It was due for more correction.

I told him: "Wait. Do not buy it at 150. Let it correct. It will likely come down to around the ₹90 level. That is where the actual support is."

He didn't agree. Driven by FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out), he took the trade anyway at ₹150. Over the next few weeks, the stock started falling heavily. The news turned negative. The retail crowd panicked. He eventually couldn't handle the pain, booked a loss, and exited the trade. Just as the chart predicted, the stock eventually hit exactly ₹90.

I reached out to him and said, "It is at 90. The setup looks good here. You can look to buy it now, but make sure you follow strict risk management and use a stop-loss."

Did he buy it? No.

He hesitated. He read a few more negative news articles and convinced himself that the stock was going to fall even further to ₹50. He sat on the sidelines, paralysed by fear.

Within a few months, the stock reversed from the ₹90 support level and skyrocketed, eventually going 3x in value. He came back to me, filled with regret, saying, "I missed it! I should have bought it where you said!"

Real-World Example 2: Chasing the Runaway Train

Here is a second example involving the exact same mindset.

I pointed out another great trade to him—a very promising setup at ₹75. He didn't buy it. Instead, he simply watched from the sidelines as the stock embarked on a massive rally, climbing all the way from ₹75 to an astonishing ₹1500.

Then, the inevitable correction started. The stock pulled back from the highs and dropped to around ₹900. Suddenly, he bought it. He reached out to me and asked, "What's your view? I just bought this."

I looked at the chart and had to tell him the hard truth: "There is still more correction left. It will likely come down to around the ₹450 level."

He held on as the stock continued to bleed. Finally, it hit the ₹400 mark—the actual, logical support zone. But when it arrived there, did he buy more to average down at a proper level? No. He was too demoralised by the drop from 900 to take action at the correct level. Later he sold at break even.

The Psychological Crux: Comfort Over Logic

Analyse the psychology of what happened in both scenarios.

In the first example, he was completely ready and eager to buy the stock at ₹150. But when the exact same stock was offered to him at a massive discount of ₹90, he was absolutely terrified to touch it. He was not scared at 150, but he was paralysed at 90. Strange, isn't it?

In the second example, he ignored a beautiful, logical setup at ₹75, but happily bought a falling knife at ₹900 just because it seemed "cheaper" than ₹1500, completely ignoring the chart's technical structure.

This is how the market and the media manipulate human psychology. At the highs (₹150 or ₹1500), a stock is surrounded by green candles, hype, and positive news. Buying it feels comfortable. At the lows (₹90 or ₹450), the stock is surrounded by red candles, fear, and doom. Buying it feels uncomfortable.

Untrained traders do not buy based on logic or technical levels; they buy based on where they feel emotionally comfortable. And in the stock market, your emotional comfort zone is usually the exact place you lose the most money.

Selective Hearing: Targets vs. Stop-Losses

These stories highlight exactly why I don't provide suggestions. People who ask for tips do not follow rules.

When a professional gives a tip, they give a complete business plan: Entry, Stop-Loss, Position Sizing, and Target. But the amateur trader suffers from selective hearing. They only hear the word "Buy" and the "Target" price. They completely ignore the "Stop-Loss" and "Risk Management" warnings. They only want to see profit. If the trade goes against them, they freeze because they never actually accepted the risk in the first place.

The Bottom Line

You cannot borrow someone else's conviction.

If I tell you to buy at a scary level, your hand will shake when you try to click the button. The only way you can confidently buy a stock at ₹90 or ₹450 when the whole world is screaming "Sell!" is if you have studied the chart yourself, understood the logic, and built your own conviction.

Stop asking for tips. Learn the charts, master your own psychology, and build the discipline to click the button when the setup is right, regardless of how uncomfortable it feels.


- the trading job

Market Is Watching You ??? The Universal Problems of a Trader.. !

 

If you are new to the stock market, you have almost certainly sat in front of your trading terminal, watched your portfolio bleed, and thought to yourself: "This only happens to me. I have the worst luck in the world."

You feel isolated. You feel like the market has a personal vendetta against you.

But here is the reality check every trader needs to hear: It does not happen only to you. It happens to absolutely everyone at the beginning.

In life, if a strange problem happens to one or two people, we can call it a coincidence or bad luck. But if the exact same sequence of problems happens to millions of people all over the world, it is no longer a coincidence. It is a system.

Here are the 9 universal problems every amateur trader faces. Read through them and realise you are not alone:

The 9 Symptoms of the Amateur Trader

1. The "Watching Me" Syndrome: The moment you buy a stock, it instantly starts dropping. The exact second you sell out of frustration, it shoots straight up. It genuinely feels like someone is sitting behind a screen, watching your account, and pressing a button just to ruin your trade.

2. The Velocity of Pain: When you are in profit, the stock moves up agonisingly slowly, and the gains are tiny. But when you are in a loss, the stock crashes with terrifying speed, wiping out weeks of work in a single hour.

3. The Dead Weight: The broader market (like the Nifty or Sensex) is having a massive, green rally, but the specific stock you are holding refuses to move. It either stays flat, or worse, it actually drops on a wildly bullish day.

4. The News Trap: If you trade based on the news, you lose money. If you try to do the opposite and completely ignore the news, you still lose money. You feel trapped in a lose-lose scenario.

5. The Liquidity Trap: When the market crashes and finally presents a massive, generational buying opportunity at the bottom, your bank account is empty. You are already fully invested at the top, leaving you with no cash to take advantage of the discount.

6. The Lagging Headlines: You notice that perfectly good, euphoric news only comes out after the stock price has already skyrocketed. Conversely, the terrifying, catastrophic news only hits the TV screens after the stock has already crashed and most of the correction is over.

7. The Fear Barrier: The absolute best prices for high-quality stocks only appear when the macroeconomic situation is so terrifying (wars, pandemics, banking crises) that no normal human being dares to touch them.

8. The Stop-Loss Hunt: You place a logical stop-loss to protect your capital. The market drops, hits your exact stop-loss price, throws you out of the trade, and then instantly reverses and rockets toward your original target.

9. The Insanity Loop: The market ruthlessly shows you your mistakes every single day. You know what you are doing wrong, yet tomorrow morning, you log in and repeat the exact same errors.

Change the Direction, Not the Goal

When you read that list, it is easy to feel defeated. But remember this fundamental rule of success: If you are walking toward a goal and a massive obstacle blocks your path, you change your direction—you do not change your goal.

If you are facing these 9 problems, your goal of becoming a consistently profitable trader is still valid. But your current direction is completely wrong.

The Crux: It Is Not Bad Luck

So, what is the ultimate crux of all this?

None of these problems are coincidences. None of this is bad luck. The market is not "watching you" to punish you personally. This is simply the working style of the market. The market is a highly efficient machine designed to transfer wealth from the uneducated to the educated. If you are experiencing these 9 problems, you are operating with a severe lack of knowledge, a lack of professional training, and a flawed mindset.

When you buy at the top and it drops, it's because Smart Money is selling to you. When the news traps you, it's because you don't know how to read price action before the news breaks. When your stop-loss gets hit and reverses, it's because you placed it exactly where institutional algorithms are hunting for retail liquidity.

Stop blaming luck. Stop feeling sorry for yourself. Accept that the market is a profession that requires elite training. Upgrade your knowledge, fix your mindset, and learn how the machine actually works.


- the trading job