The Ultimate Teacher: Why You Must Cut the Rope


Throughout our lives, we all have teachers. We have teachers in school and professors in college who teach us the different subjects. But these are just academic instructors.

A real teacher is something entirely different. A real teacher is someone—or something—that teaches you a fundamental lesson about life, a lesson so profound that you could never possibly compensate them with money.

When you enter the stock market, you meet the most ruthless, honest, and brilliant teacher in the world: Price.

If you spend enough hours staring at the charts on your screen, Price will teach you how to read the market's behaviour. It will show you exactly where the Smart Money is buying and where they are selling. But here is the catch: merely understanding the price behaviour is not enough. You need to have blind faith in it.

You must never try to outsmart your teacher.

The Mountain Climber's Rope

To understand why this faith is the difference between survival and ruin, consider the story of the ambitious mountain climber.

A man was climbing a massive, treacherous mountain alone. He wanted the glory all to himself. But he miscalculated the time, and before he could reach the summit, night fell. It was pitch black, freezing cold, and visibility dropped to zero. Suddenly, his foot slipped on an icy rock, and he plummeted into the darkness.

He fell for what felt like an eternity, terrified, until suddenly—SNAP! The safety rope tied to his waist caught him. He was left dangling in the pitch-black freezing air, unable to see anything above or below him. Paralysed by fear and the biting cold, he looked up to the sky and prayed, "God, please help me! Save me!"

A booming voice echoed from the clouds: "Do you truly have faith in me?"

The climber cried out, "Yes! I will do anything, just save me!"

God replied, "Take the knife from your belt, and cut the rope."

The climber froze. Total confusion and terror took over his mind. His human logic screamed at him: If I cut the rope, I will fall into the abyss and die. He decided he was smarter than the God. He refused to cut the rope. He gripped it tighter and hung there all night.

The next morning, a rescue team found the climber's body. He had frozen to death in the night, his hands gripping the rope with all his might.

He was hanging exactly five feet above the solid ground.

If he had simply believed the God, killed his fear, and cut the rope, he would have dropped safely to the ground and lived.

Don't Outsmart the Chart

Every single day in the stock market, retail traders are hanging from that exact same rope.

You enter a trade, and suddenly the market turns against you. You are sitting in a loss. It is scary, confusing, and you don't know what to do. Then, you look at your teacher: The Chart.

The Price Action clearly breaks your support level. The chart is screaming at you: "The setup has failed. Take the stop-loss. Cut the rope."

But just like the climber, your fear and human ego take over. You think, If I hit sell and book this loss, my money is gone. I will die financially. So, you refuse to cut the rope. You ignore the chart, you hold onto the losing trade, and you hope for a miracle. You grip the stock tighter and tighter as it falls 10%, 20%, 50%, until your entire account freezes and dies.

What you didn't realise is that the stop-loss wasn't a death sentence; it was the solid ground just five feet below you. Taking that small loss would have saved your account and kept you alive to trade another day.

The Bottom Line

When the market speaks, you listen.

When your trading system gives you an entry, you buy, even if the news is terrifying. When the chart breaks your stop-loss, you sell, even if it hurts your ego.

Stop trying to outsmart the market. Believe your teacher, kill your fear, and do exactly what the Price tells you to do. Cut the rope when you have to.


- the trading job

The Stupid Market !!


If you spend enough time staring at the charts on your screen, there will come a day when you throw your hands up in frustration and shout, "The market is completely stupid! It has no idea how to behave!"

Every day, retail traders and investors curse the market. They watch a stock rally aggressively for weeks and complain, "Why is it moving up? There is no reason for this!" Or they watch the index bleed for days and say, "It should stop falling now. The economy is doing great, the GDP is up, the ground reality is completely different!"

This creates a massive psychological conflict. People look at the "ground reality" of the present economy and compare it to the stock market, and when the two don't match, they assume the market is broken, manipulated, or just plain stupid.

Here is the ultimate reality check: The market is not stupid. It is the smartest, most efficient machine on the planet. The reason it doesn't match your current reality is simple: You are looking at the present, but the market is looking at the future.

The Forward-Looking Machine

The stock market is a "discounting mechanism." It does not care about what happened yesterday, and it barely cares about what is happening today. The market is completely obsessed with what is going to happen 6 to 9 months from now.

Think of the economy as a photograph of the present, but the stock market as a telescope looking into the future.

Discounting the Worst

When a crisis hits or a negative rumour starts circulating, retail traders often wait for "confirmation" from the news before they act. The market does not wait.

The moment there is a hint that something might go wrong, the market instantly drops. It immediately "discounts" (prices in) the absolute worst-case scenario. It assumes the highest level of damage right away.

This is why, months later, when the terrible news is finally printed on the front page of every newspaper, the market actually stops falling and starts going up. The retail crowd is confused. They ask, "The news is so bad today, why is the market green?" It is green because the market already priced in that bad news six months ago. The worst is already in the price, and now the market is looking forward to the recovery.

Pricing in the Good

The exact same thing happens with positive news. If a company is secretly securing a massive contract or developing a game-changing product, the Smart Money figures it out early. They start buying. The stock price shoots up month after month.

Retail traders look at the rising chart and say, "This makes no sense. The company hasn't announced anything. The market is acting stupid."

Then, three months later, the company officially announces the massive contract. The retail crowd says, "Wow, great news! Now is the time to buy!" But the moment they buy, the stock crashes. Why? Because the market had already priced in that good news months ago. When the news finally became "present reality," the Smart Money sold their shares to the latecomers.

The Bottom Line: Trust the Telescope

People only realise the truth when it happens in the present. But the market has already moved on to the next future event.

Stop cursing the market for not matching the evening news. If the chart on your screen is going down while the economy looks perfect, trust the chart. The market sees a storm coming that hasn't hit the newspapers yet. If the chart is going up while the world seems to be ending, trust the chart. The market sees the sunrise before anyone else.

The market is never wrong. It is just living six months ahead of you.

-the trading job

The Form and The Class: The Ultimate Filter for Your Portfolio

 

There is a famous saying in the world of sports that applies perfectly to life, business, and especially the stock market: "Form is temporary, class is permanent."

When you are making a decision—whether you are hiring an employee, making a friend, or buying a stock—you can never come to a true conclusion just by looking at their current "form." Form is a short-term illusion. To know the truth about an asset or a person, you must look deeper. You must check their class.

The Cricket Analogy: 5 Ducks in a Row

To understand the difference, imagine a legendary cricket batsman. He has played for over a decade, scored maximum runs, hit countless centuries.

Suddenly, he goes through a terrible patch. He gets out for zero (a duck) in five consecutive matches. The media panics, the fans start criticising him, and everyone says he is finished.

But what does the coach know? The coach knows that the five zeros only represent the player's form. His form is currently terrible. But his class—his technique, his experience, and his proven track record over ten years—remains completely intact, he knows that form will eventually return, but you cannot replace class.

Translating Form and Class to the Stock Market

In the stock market, retail traders constantly confuse form with class. They make life-altering financial decisions based purely on what a stock is doing right now.

Here is how you separate the two on your trading terminal:

  • The Form (The 6-Month Chart): When you look at a stock's chart for the last 6 months or 1 year, you are strictly looking at its form. A fundamentally terrible company can have "great form" for six months because of a temporary news cycle or manipulation. A phenomenal, market-leading company can have "terrible form" for a year due to macroeconomic headwinds or sector rotation.

  • The Class (The All-Time Chart): When you zoom out and look at the chart from the very beginning—covering 5, 10, or 20 years—you are looking at its class. You see how the company survived massive market crashes, how it handled inflation, and how consistently it grew its earnings over a decade.

The Ultimate Mistake: Buying Form and Selling Class

The reason so many people lose money in investing is that they do the exact opposite of what the cricket coach does.

They look at a fundamentally weak, "penny stock" that has hit upper circuits for three weeks in a row. They get mesmerised by its current form and invest their entire capital. When the manipulation ends, the stock crashes  because it never had any class.

Conversely, they look at a world-class, Blue Chip company that has been moving sideways or correcting for eight months. Disgusted by its current bad form, they sell their shares at a loss, completely forgetting the decades of wealth it has compounded.

The Bottom Line: Bet on Class

Whenever you are selecting a stock for investment, do not get fooled by the short-term form.

Form will constantly fluctuate. A great company will have bad quarters. A great stock will have brutal corrections. But if you do your fundamental and long-term technical analysis and confirm that the class of the business is pristine, you can invest with peace of mind.

If the class is good, sooner or later, the form will return, and the ultimate outcome will be highly profitable. Bet on class, and let time do the rest.

- the trading job