These days placing a trade in the early morning of the U.S Equities session brings with it, a high percentage chance – of just getting your face blown off.
Understand that the vast majority of what the industry defines as “dumb money” refers to those trades placed “before the bell” – as well those placed within the first hour after.
The “smart money” is generally buying or selling during the final hour of trading.
Pulling this apart – it makes pretty good sense. Newbie traders driven purely by emotion, catch wind of a news story overnight, or perhaps on the early morning financial news and “rush to get in” with fear of missing the move. Like lambs to the slaughter more often than not, price drops out from under them, fear sets in, perhaps even panic, and shares are then dropped / sold – only to be picked up on the cheap by the “smart money/big boys” just moments before the close.
Wash.Rinse.Repeat – and so the market goes.
For the most part, I view the “entire trading day” during the U.S session, as being nothing more than a meat grinder for retail traders, who generally enter at the wrong time, and in turn – are easily shaken out of their positions.
- Do you find it difficult to resist the urge to buy in the early morning?
- Do you think you could learn to condition your behavior, and consider buying the close?
USD on day 3 in a row literally “flat as a pancake” as Thursday is now in sight. I’m “still” holding a number of pairs (10 pairs actually) with little concern – short of being bored to death. I’ll keep my eyes open late afternoon and have little expectation of “anything big” happening here today.
The Psychology Behind Market Timing – Why Most Traders Get It Wrong
The harsh reality is that most retail traders are wired backwards for this game. They buy strength and sell weakness, driven by the same emotional triggers that keep casinos in business. When markets gap up on some overnight news, the amateur crowd can’t help themselves – they pile in like it’s Black Friday at Best Buy, convinced they’re about to catch the ride of a lifetime.
But here’s what separates the professionals from the weekend warriors: patience and contrarian thinking. While retail money is chasing momentum at the open, institutional players are quietly setting up their positions for the real move – the one that happens when everyone else has been shaken out.
The Smart Money Playbook
Smart money doesn’t chase. They create the conditions that force others to chase. Think about it – if you’re moving serious size, you need liquidity. Where do you find that liquidity? From all those emotional trades placed by retail traders who got spooked out of their positions during the session. The final hour becomes a feeding frenzy where institutions can accumulate or distribute at prices that seemed impossible just hours earlier.
This isn’t some conspiracy theory – it’s basic market mechanics. Large players need counterparties for their trades, and retail traders provide that liquidity at exactly the wrong times. The USD weakness we’ve been seeing is a perfect example of this dynamic playing out across multiple sessions.
Why USD Remains Dead Money
Three days of sideways action in USD might seem boring, but it’s actually telling us everything we need to know. The dollar is stuck in neutral because the big players have already positioned themselves. They’re not scrambling to get in or out – they’re waiting for the next catalyst while retail traders exhaust themselves with meaningless intraday noise.
Holding ten pairs in this environment isn’t about being a hero – it’s about understanding that major moves require major catalysts. When the dollar finally breaks, it won’t be a gentle drift lower. It’ll be a waterfall that catches everyone who thought they were being patient by waiting for ‘just a little more confirmation.’
The Late Session Edge
The afternoon session offers something the morning never can – clarity. By 2 PM Eastern, the emotional trades have been placed, the weak hands have been shaken out, and the real players start showing their cards. This is when you see authentic institutional flows, not the reactive nonsense that dominates the early hours.
Professional traders understand that the market bottom signals often appear in these quiet late-session moments when everyone else has given up looking. The smart money accumulates in silence while retail traders are checking their phones for the next news alert that might justify another emotional trade.
Breaking the Emotional Trading Cycle
The key to escaping the retail trader trap is recognizing that your instincts are probably wrong. When everything inside you screams ‘buy now,’ that’s exactly when you should step back. When the morning news makes you feel like you’re missing out, remember that FOMO is the enemy of profitable trading.
Instead of fighting your emotions, use them as a contrarian indicator. When you feel that burning urge to chase a move at the open, write it down and revisit it during the final hour. More often than not, you’ll find better entry points and clearer risk parameters when the emotional noise dies down.
The market doesn’t reward urgency – it punishes it. Every rushed trade, every emotional entry, every ‘I can’t miss this move’ moment is precisely what funds the accounts of patient professionals who understand that real money is made in the margins that others overlook.






