Interview with EagleTrader | How to make execution bring profits under repeated market trends

In the eyes of many people, trading is a process of excitement, unrestrainedness, and wrestling with the market. But Wen Rongjin’s trading world has always maintained a restrained sense of order.

In five years of trading, he is not the kind of person who chases fast-paced market conditions, nor is he a trader who relies on intuition and improvisation. He is more like a patient “trend watcher”: wait, follow, execute – no unnecessary moves.

The optimism about the financial future was the first germination of Wen Rongjin’s interest in trading; but what really motivated him to persevere was another belief: determination for the future, trust in the system, and the perseverance of “I can get out of it.” This point is particularly clear when he talks about his trading career.

<img alt="" src="https://www.hudianbaoseo.cn/uploads/allimg/20251125/1764037626853901.jpg" width="654" height = 342 His understanding of the Dow Theory was thorough: price has it all, and trend is the answer.

There is no macro prediction or news following in his system. There are only trend pulses, structural strength, signal triggering and regular execution.

While many traders are constantly “optimizing the system” and chasing higher winning rates, he has instead embarked on another path that is more difficult to adhere to: “A positive system makes money by execution, not by continuous optimization.”

There is no “Holy Grail” fantasy, and he is no longer trapped in a cycle of frequent strategy adjustments. His system only made minor revisions in April this year, and has remained stable and focused on execution since then.

Maturity after great pain

He frankly said that he had experienced a liquidation. That was a typical mistake he made when he was still immature: heavy positions, data trends, instant reversals, getting emotional, and diluting costs. “I didn’t know it during the session, and I regretted it after the session, but it didn’t make any sense.”

What really changed him was a deep understanding of “pain”. The market is never gentle. It educates traders in the most direct way: without position discipline and capital management, it is bound to lead to disaster.

After the liquidation, he no longer fantasized about the market; instead, he began to believe in one thing – a trader’s growth does not come from talent, but from changes after accepting pain.

Trend trading driven by fund management

Stability is the soul of Wen Rongjin’s trading system.When the market fluctuates, many traders first consider “how much to make”; but they always start with “survive”.

“Fund management is to survive. After all, only by surviving can you have a chance to make a profit.” His entry and exit revolve around the trend structure, but position management is his core safety valve.

He gave two key points:

The position will not be so heavy that it gets out of control. “Strict capital management determines that it is impossible to have an overweight position.”

There are only two ways to stop loss: loss based on quantity, or quantity based on loss

No matter how the market changes, the loss limit is “locked in advance.”

This also explains why he is rarely led astray by “emotional trends”. Because in his system, the only variable allowed to exist is the trend itself.

The Reality of Trend Trading

Trend trading is not a smooth road. Profit retracement is its destiny. “You won’t leave the market easily until the trend changes.”, he said, “Trends are for following, not predicting.”

Profit retracement is not failure, but an integral part of trend trading. He will not leave the market early in order to “preserve floating profits”; nor will he give up his signal because of a short-term retracement. Because for him, every transaction is not about being right, but whether positive expectations are maintained throughout the entire cycle.

Why choose to take the ET exam

When it comes to taking the ET exam
When it came to the biggest gain from the exam, he only emphasized one thing: “Because here, you can truly establish a sense of rules – ET only looks at execution, not temporary profits and losses. It also confirms the sentence: long-term profit does not rely on luck, but on the firm execution of the trading system.”

For system traders like Wen Rongjin, the exam is not a competition, but a mirror that can truly reflect one’s own execution ability.

There are no emotional heavy positions, no random additions or dilutions; only standardized rules and clearly visible risk boundaries. Such an environment is especially important for trend traders: it allows them to shift their focus from “betting on the market” to “sticking to the system.”

For traders who want to become professional, this kind of training is of great significance.

At the end of the interview, he left a message for all new EagleTrader traders: “Trading must maintain consistent output, regardless of profit or loss, only look at the execution of the system; if there is no system, establish a system first.”

He always believes that trends can repeat, and the system must be stable; the market can get out of control, and traders cannot be overwhelmed. Therefore, he regards himself as a “continuous calibrator” – constantly testing, polishing and revising the rules.

This is also the reason why many traders are willing to enter EagleTrader: it allows people to return their attention to the essence of trading.



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