Here’s a concise 200-word description of how I’d run a trading operation if I were in the markets:

My trading operation is built on a disciplined, data-driven approach combining fundamentals, technicals, and risk management. I start with macro analysis to identify the broader economic environment — interest rates, market sentiment, sector rotations. From there, I scan for high-probability setups using chart patterns, volume analysis, and momentum indicators.

Positions are sized using strict risk limits, typically risking no more than 1–2% of capital per trade. Every position has a predefined entry, stop-loss, and profit target, adjusted as the trade develops. I track correlations across assets to avoid concentrated risk.

The operation is tech-heavy: algorithmic models run continuously to backtest strategies, monitor market conditions, and execute trades faster than manual reaction. However, discretion is applied — if the data says “go” but market context feels off, I’ll stand aside.

Profits are scaled by pyramiding into winning trades and cutting losers quickly. Capital allocation shifts between swing trades, intraday plays, and occasional longer-term holds.

Every week, I review trade logs to identify strengths, weaknesses, and missed opportunities, ensuring the process evolves with the market. The core principle is simple: protect capital first, grow it second.

Do you want me to also make a more aggressive high-risk version of this?