Why You Need a Written Trading Plan Before You Buy Anything
Imagine going grocery shopping without a list. What happens? You end up with a cart full of things you didn't need, and you forget the milk you originally went for.
Exactly the same thing happens on the stock market. Without a written plan, people buy "by feel" – reacting to hype on TikTok, panic from a sea of red, or a friend's hot tip. The result tends to be predictable: chaos, losses, and frustration.
A written plan forces you to think ahead, calmly and rationally – before emotions are even in the picture.
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What Is a Trading Plan and Why Write It Down
A trading plan is a simple document (even a single page works) where you write down your investing rules in advance. Not after the trade. Before it.
Why written? Because our brains are unreliable under stress or excitement. What you "remember" you promised yourself can easily shift under market pressure. A written rule holds up to emotions far better than a mental intention.
Psychologists call this precommitment – you bind yourself to rules in a calm moment. That makes them much harder to break later.
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What a Trading Plan Must Contain
A solid beginner's plan has six core components:
1. Investment Goal
What are you actually trying to achieve? Examples:
- "I want to build wealth for retirement in 25 years."
- "I want a 500,000 CZK reserve in 10 years."
- "I want to learn how to invest and won't risk more than 50,000 CZK in the first year."
The goal must be specific. "I want to make money" is not enough.
2. Time Horizon
How long do you plan to hold shares? A week? 5 years? 20 years?
Your time horizon determines which stocks are even appropriate for you – and how to react to drawdowns.
3. Entry Criteria
Under what conditions would you even consider a stock? For example:
- The company must have growing earnings for at least 3 consecutive years.
- P/E ratio must not exceed 30.
- Price should be near its 52-week low.
Without entry criteria, investing becomes gambling.
4. Exit Criteria
When will you sell the position?
This is the most important part of the plan. It covers two situations:
- Stop-loss (protecting against loss): "I will sell if the stock falls more than 8% from my purchase price."
- Take-profit or reassessment: "I will reassess the position if the stock rises 25%, or if the company's fundamentals change significantly."
5. Maximum Risk Per Trade
How much money are you willing to lose on a single trade? The standard recommendation for beginners is
a maximum of 1–2% of the portfolio per trade.
Example: You have a portfolio of 100,000 CZK. 2% = 2,000 CZK. That is the maximum loss per trade. If you set a stop-loss at 10% below the purchase price, you invest at most 20,000 CZK in that trade.
6. Rules for Bad Days
What will you do when the market is crashing and panic sets in? You must write this down in advance:
- "If I've lost more than 5% of my portfolio on two consecutive days, I stop trading for 48 hours and reassess."
- "I never flip a position on the same day I sold it out of emotion."
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Sample Trading Plan Template
Here is a simple template you can adapt to your needs:
| Plan Section | Example |
|---|
| Goal | Long-term wealth building, 10+ year horizon |
| Time Horizon | Minimum 3 years per position |
| Entry Criteria | Growing EPS for 3+ years, P/E < 30, strong brand |
| Stop-Loss | −8% from purchase price |
| Take-Profit / Reassessment | +30% or change in fundamentals |
| Max. Risk Per Trade | 2% of portfolio (= 2,000 CZK on 100,000 CZK) |
| Rule for Bad Days | Loss >5% in one day: 48h pause, no trades |
| Forbidden Behavior | No reaction to Twitter/TikTok news without analysis |
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How It Looks in Practice: An Example with AAPL
Note: This is an illustrative example only, not an investment recommendation.
Jana has a portfolio of 100,000 CZK and is considering buying Apple (AAPL) shares. According to her plan, she runs through the checklist:
- ✅ Apple has grown earnings for more than 3 consecutive years
- ✅ P/E is within a reasonable range for the technology sector
- ✅ Strong brand, global presence
- ✅ 2% of 100,000 CZK = 2,000 CZK maximum loss → she buys at most 25,000 CZK worth with a stop-loss at −8%
Jana writes in her trading journal:
"Buying AAPL because it meets all plan criteria. Stop-loss at −8%. Will reassess in 3 months or if fundamentals change."
Two weeks later, Apple drops 5%. Jana doesn't buy more "because it's cheaper," and she doesn't sell "because she's scared" – she simply follows the plan. The stop-loss hasn't been triggered, so she waits.
That is the power of a written plan.
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How a Plan Protects Against Emotional Decisions
Our brains react to loss approximately twice as strongly as to an equivalent gain. This is well-documented in psychology – it's called loss aversion. The result is that we:
- Hold losing positions too long ("it's sure to turn around")
- Sell winning positions too early out of fear that the gain will disappear
- Buy after a big rally because "it must continue"
- Sell after a big drop because "it's going to get worse"
A written plan
moves these decisions from the emotional centre of the brain to a pre-established rule. Instead of asking "what do I feel right now?" you ask "what does my plan say?"
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How to Do This in QMA
QMA includes a Trading Journal feature at /journal, designed specifically to connect your plan with reality.
What you'll find in /journal and how it helps:
- Trade records with reasons: For each trade, you can note why you opened it – which plan criteria it met. When you come back a month later, you'll see whether you followed the rules or reacted emotionally.
- Tracking mistakes and patterns: The journal helps you spot recurring errors – for instance, that you always buy after a sharp rally, or sell at the first dip.
- Comparing intention to outcome: A recorded intention ("buying because it meets criteria X, Y, Z") versus the actual result is the best way to learn.
- On the /stocks/[symbol] page (e.g. /stocks/AAPL), you'll find fundamental data that helps you verify the entry criteria in your plan – P/E, historical earnings and other indicators.
The journal isn't about tracking returns. It's about tracking the
quality of your decision-making. Even a bad result from a good decision moves you forward. A good result from a random decision moves you backward.
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Summary: Six Rules of a Written Plan
- Write it before you open your first position.
- Be specific – vague rules don't get followed.
- Include a stop-loss – without one, it's not really a plan.
- The bad-day rule is mandatory, not optional.
- Record every trade in the journal with your reasons.
- Revise the plan every 3–6 months, not every day.
A written plan doesn't guarantee profits. But it significantly increases the probability that you'll invest systematically, with discipline, and without costly emotional mistakes.
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Disclaimer
QMA is an analytical and educational tool, not investment advice. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. All investment decisions are your own responsibility.