The five fundamental truths of trading
In Trading in the Zone, Mark Douglas distilled the trader's mindset into five fundamental truths. They sound simple, even obvious — and they quietly contradict almost everything an untrained trader instinctively believes. Internalizing them is the work of a career. A systematic strategy is, in effect, these five truths turned into code.
These truths are widely attributed to Douglas's work and are paraphrased here in our own words. Their power is cumulative: each removes a layer of the need to be right, until what's left is simply executing an edge over a large sample. Here's each, and how a rules-based approach embodies it.
1. Anything can happen — 2. You don't need to predict
The market can do anything at any moment, because it's the sum of countless unknown decisions. It follows that you don't need to forecast the next move to make money — you need an edge and the discipline to deploy it repeatedly. A system never predicts; it reacts to its defined conditions. That's truths one and two, built in.
3. Wins and losses are randomly distributed
For any edge, the sequence of wins and losses is effectively random, even when the edge is real. You cannot know whether this trade wins, only that over many trades the edge asserts itself — which is why your edge only shows up over a large sample and why a losing streak isn't evidence the edge broke. A system doesn't flinch at a string of losses; it keeps executing because the distribution is expected.
4. An edge is a higher probability — 5. Every moment is unique
An edge isn't a guarantee; it's merely a higher probability of one outcome over another — small, but enough over a large sample. And because every moment in the market is unique, the fact that a setup “worked last time” tells you little about this time. A system treats each signal as an independent instance of its edge, immune to the recency and pattern-confidence illusions that lead humans astray.
Why a system honours all five automatically
A human must consciously fight to hold these truths under pressure. A rules-based strategy holds them by construction: it doesn't predict, doesn't fear randomness, treats its edge as probabilistic, and takes each setup as unique. That's the deep reason a systematic approach works — it externalizes the five truths so you don't have to win the argument with your own psychology on every trade.
The five truths all point one way: stop trying to be right about the trade, and execute an edge over a sample. A system is those truths in code — it never predicts, never fears the random sequence, and treats every moment as the unique, probabilistic event it is.
A system feels none of this
The free Playbook shows six rules-based strategies that execute the same way whether you're fearful, greedy, or bored.
Get the PlaybookThis is educational content about trading psychology and process, not financial advice. Concepts attributed to Mark Douglas are paraphrased and discussed in our own words. All strategy figures referenced are hypothetical, derived from backtested data and Monte Carlo simulation; past and simulated performance does not guarantee future results. Trading involves substantial risk of loss.