Master Your Trading Mind
A six-month journey into the psychology that separates profitable traders from everyone else
Most trading education focuses on charts and indicators. We start where others stop—with the decisions you make under pressure, the habits that sabotage good plans, and the mental frameworks that help you stay consistent when markets get messy. Our program begins September 2025 in Taichung, with enrollment opening June 1st.
Request InformationOur Foundation
Why Psychology Comes First
Technical analysis is straightforward. You can learn patterns in weeks. But knowing what to do and actually doing it when your account balance is dropping? That's where things fall apart.
We've seen traders with perfect setups bail out too early because they couldn't handle the discomfort. Others who held losing positions way too long because admitting they were wrong felt worse than losing money.
This program addresses that gap. You'll study decision-making under uncertainty, build awareness of your own behavioral patterns, and develop practical strategies for staying disciplined when your emotions are screaming at you to do something else.
- Small cohorts of 12-15 participants for meaningful discussion and peer learning
- Weekly evening sessions that fit around work schedules
- Practice exercises using paper trading accounts to test your psychological responses
- Access to instructors between sessions for questions and clarification
What Six Months Actually Covers
Each module builds on the last. We don't rush. The goal is real understanding, not just covering material.
Risk Perception and Response
How your brain processes risk differently than probability suggests. Why some people freeze and others overtrade. Building awareness of your default patterns when facing uncertainty.
Emotional Regulation Techniques
Practical methods for managing stress and frustration in real time. Not meditation apps—actual techniques you can use when a position moves against you at 2pm on a Tuesday.
Building Consistent Habits
Creating routines that support disciplined trading. How to prepare for sessions, how to review what happened, how to learn from both wins and losses without spiraling.
Cognitive Biases in Markets
Confirmation bias, recency bias, loss aversion—you've heard the terms. We look at how they actually show up in your decision-making and what to do about it.
Plan Development and Execution
Creating trading plans you'll actually follow. Setting rules that match your psychology instead of fighting against it. Building in flexibility without abandoning structure.
Long-Term Sustainability
How to keep going when you hit rough patches. Maintaining discipline through drawdowns. Building resilience that lasts beyond this program.
How Learning Actually Happens
We don't lecture for three hours straight. Sessions mix short presentations with group discussions, individual reflection time, and practical exercises. You'll spend more time thinking and doing than passively listening.
Weekly In-Person Sessions
Tuesday evenings, 7-9:30pm at our Taichung location. Enough time to dig into concepts without burning everyone out. Miss a session? We record core content and catch you up.
Practice Between Meetings
Short assignments that take 30-45 minutes. Usually involves tracking your thoughts during paper trades or journaling about specific decisions. Nothing requiring hours of work.
Real Scenario Analysis
We look at actual trading situations—sometimes from instructor experience, sometimes from participant journals. What happened, what they were thinking, where psychology helped or hurt.
Building Your Framework
By month five, you're developing your own psychological trading plan. We provide structure and feedback. You customize it to match how your brain actually works.
What Past Participants Say
From our March 2024 cohort
I'd been trading for three years and kept making the same mistakes. This program didn't fix everything overnight, but it gave me tools to recognize what I was doing wrong before I did it. That awareness alone changed how I approach every session.
The small group format made a huge difference. Hearing other people struggle with the same psychological traps I faced helped me feel less alone in this. And the instructors actually answered questions instead of deflecting to theory.
I came in skeptical. But the focus on actual behavioral patterns rather than vague mindset stuff won me over. The journal exercises were uncomfortable at first—you really have to confront your bad habits. Worth it though.