I Don’t Trade Momentum — I Trade the Moment It Breaks
Most people assume I’m a momentum trader. I’m not.
I focus on something far less comfortable — and far more interesting: the moment momentum starts to fail.
This isn’t investment advice. It’s simply how I trade — the lens I use when I interact with markets, volatility, and risk.
The Real Idea Behind My Trades
I trade high‑volatility U.S. tech stocks, using options only. Not because I want leverage for its own sake — but because options let me express one very specific idea: momentum exhaustion, not momentum continuation.
I don’t chase strength. I wait for strength to stretch, slow down, and show cracks. Where others look for confirmation to enter, I look for signals that conviction is fading.
This puts me in a narrow window:
- After big moves
- After emotion peaks
- Before the next sharp repricing
That’s where I operate.
Why I Wait for the Market to Move First
Quiet stocks don’t interest me. The setups I care about almost always begin with aggressive moves — typically 7–15% or more in a short period.
Fast. Emotional. Obvious. Multiple strong candles. Heavy attention. Everyone suddenly has an opinion.
That’s not my entry — that’s the setup phase. Once the move is made, I step back and observe.
What Momentum Breaking Actually Looks Like
Momentum doesn’t end with a bell. It erodes.
I watch for:
- Smaller candles after large ones
- Longer wicks and hesitation
- Volume fading or spiking without follow‑through
- Sideways movement after a clean trend
Nothing dramatic — just subtle behavioral shifts. That’s usually when late buyers realize the easy part is over.
Timing Is Everything (And My Biggest Personal Risk)
I don’t enter at the peak of hype. In most cases, I wait:
1–3 days after the main move
Until price action loses urgency
My biggest weakness as a trader has always been entering too early — so I deliberately slow myself down. If the structure still looks healthy, I do nothing. No trade is a position.
Events Matter — Reactions Matter More
Earnings, news, macro events — they all influence volatility. Depending on context, I’ll either:
- Position into volatility
- Or wait for the market’s reaction, then trade the mispricing that follows
I don’t trade narratives. I trade how price behaves after everyone reacts to the narrative.
Why I Trade Options (And Avoid the Noise)
Options give me flexibility without requiring perfect timing.
My typical structure:
- Calls or puts, depending on the setup
- Expirations ~6–8 weeks out
- No short‑dated lottery tickets
That distance gives the thesis room to play out — and protects me from immediate time decay. Options aren’t about gambling for me. They’re about expression.
Position Size Is a Reflection of Certainty
Not every idea deserves size.
Some setups:
- Get larger allocation when structure, timing, and context align
Others:
- Start as small “test” positions when something might be developing
I’m fine being early small. I’m not willing to be early big.
My Exits Are Where the Edge Lives
Entries get attention. Exits create consistency.
Primary Rule: If I’m up around 80%, I take the trade. No hesitation. I don’t try to be perfect.
Secondary Rule: If that level isn’t reached: I’m usually out around 50% profit before the final month of expiry Dead time is silent damage.
Risk Control: If the trade clearly breaks: I cut it — usually between ‑10% and ‑30% No hoping. No negotiating with the chart.
What I Actively Avoid
Knowing what not to trade matters more than finding setups.
I avoid:
Slow movers
Stocks without volatility expansion
Entering before confirmation
Holding through sideways decay
Some stocks just keep trending — and that’s fine. Missing those trades is the price I pay for discipline.
The Three Patterns I See Most Often
Most of my trades fall into one of these:
1. Exhaustion → Reversal Big move → hesitation → fade with options
2. Weak Pullback → Continuation Failure Small bounce → rejection → downside expansion
3. Post‑Event Overreaction Earnings spike → stall → volatility reprices
Different shapes. Same psychology.
Why This Approach Fits Me
I don’t need to predict the future.
I operate where:
Retail traders arrive late
Momentum traders hesitate
Volatility is mispriced
I’m not trying to be right about stories. I’m trying to be positioned when emotion disconnects from structure.
Final Thoughts
I’m not a classic momentum trader. I’m not a long‑term investor. I’m a short‑term volatility trader, focused on momentum breaks and behavioral shifts, using options as my primary tool.
I trade moves — not narratives. When the move is over, I’m out.
That simple rule has kept me aligned with both capital and sanity.