Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

InvestCEO with Kyle Henris

Public • 19.9k • Free

InvestCEO Boardroom

Private • 366 • $250/m

367 contributions to InvestCEO with Kyle Henris
Clueless
I don't know what to do here.😅
2
2
New comment 3h ago
0 likes • 4h
1 - Check out the “Start Here” post pinned at the top of the page 2 - Go through the lessons in the classroom
Realtime P/L not showing during trade
Hello. This has happened before but I made one trade and the P/L adjusted during the trade. This next trade, I did the exact same thing and the profit/loss isn't tracking. Everything was set up correctly but for some reason it just seems like the order didn't place correctly. Does this happen often?
1
6
New comment 24m ago
Realtime P/L not showing during trade
0 likes • 7h
Doesn't look like price hit your entry
0 likes • 7h
@Jennifer Collier looking at the candles in your screenshot, none of them touched your entry so you wouldn't have ever been filled on your trade
Do you want this?
Hey crew, I recorded a training I put together on simplifying Superman setups. If you want access just comment "Superman" below and my brother @Ryan Henris will send it to ya asap!
120
768
New comment 2h ago
Do you want this?
0 likes • 5d
@Steven Jeffers you have this in your messages already 🙂
1 like • 22h
@Darren Branch you have this already 👍 just take a look at our messages
Progress vs Problem Avoidance
This is a lesson that will be crucial for many of you. There is a big, big difference between making actual progress versus putting in time and work: Progress = taking the challenging action steps necessary to make real, incremental improvements over time. Problem avoidance = putting in time that's related to your goal, but doing so in an attempt to make things easier or get to your goal faster. Here's examples of the differences... - What you do: Go through the course for a 4th time, or watch a bunch of videos on a completely different strategy hoping to discover some new revelation. (Problem avoidance) - What you should do: Create daily and weekly habits of going back through your detailed trade log to find the single biggest factor you can improve the following week. This could be your profit factor, your quantity of trades (in relation to over or under trading), or your win rate (in relation to where you're creating your plan areas). You then focus on only that thing, keeping everything else equal. Measure the result over a period of weeks. (Progress) - What you do: Increase your risk size or try to copy trade multiple evaluation accounts in an attempt to reach your income goals as fast as possible. When you get close to renewal, you take on more risk to make sure you pass or fail. (Problem avoidance) - What you should do: Focus on building a single account at a time until you have proven you're responsible in managing money like a fund manager would. This means you protect capital, make incremental gains over time, and work your way to a payout before you try to scale. You recognize that with real money you don't just "get to start over." (Progress) - What you do: Lose a trade, or a streak of trades, go on tilt, and then turn to the community to vent. Then you post screenshots of the trade asking "what you did wrong." (Problem avoidance) - What you should do: Accept that losing is a necessary and unavoidable part of the trading process. There is no right answer or solution for losing. Instead, you create daily habits around mindset and emotional control. You don't skip days working on those habits and judge your success or failure on the trade not by whether you won or lost, but by whether you did what you said you were going to do. (Progress)
103
27
New comment 5h ago
Progress vs Problem Avoidance
2 likes • 1d
@Glenn Ingraham you're missing the point. No one has said anything about taking 4 different trades for 4 different accounts per day. The point is that if you haven't proven that you can pass an evaluation (with real risk management - not fast lane), and then proven that you can take that PA to a payout, then it is reckless to combine multiple accounts. After you've taken a PA to a payout then sure, go ahead and add accounts to it because at that point you've proven you can do it. We say that for a reason - because we've been around the block a few times and seen multiple people pass 20 accounts by taking on huge risk, then combine all 20 PAs and blow all of them, resulting in thousands of dollars wasted.
2 likes • 1d
@Glenn Ingraham I promise I understand the concept of copying trades across multiple accounts. My point is that if you haven’t gotten a payout from a single PA yet, then maybe we should do that first before combining a bunch of accounts
One of the coolest trading experiences!
Check this out, pretty cool trading day yesterday given the circumstances. ✅ Comment below if you want more info
135
397
New comment 3d ago
One of the coolest trading experiences!
0 likes • 3d
@David Fisher just sent you a message
0 likes • 3d
@Stacey Crews I’ll shoot you a message 👍
1-10 of 367
Ryan Henris
6
883points to level up
@ryan-henris-8414
Senior Advisor at InvestCEO

Online now
Joined Sep 5, 2023
Michigan
powered by