Leadership selection, precise entries, and disciplined process.
Mark Minervini's public material centers on finding strength, waiting for alignment, executing precisely, and reviewing trades through a repeatable process.
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Mindset, Consistency, Discipline, Risk Management
View FCPO connection onlyPublic Source Dossier · 78Holy Grail in Trading Video · 62Master Trader Program Video · 47
Minervini advises that you should only initiate trades when several specific conditions line up: the overall market tone is supportive, the individual stock shows leadership or strength, the chart displays constructive price action consistent with the trade plan, and a precise entry signal is present.
He emphasizes watching volatility and the broader market for confirmation rather than getting aggressive solely because indexes are strong; both the environment and the stock must validate the opportunity.
This disciplined alignment reduces guesswork, helps limit risk, and increases the odds that a position will perform as expected.
FCPO ApplicationRelevance 5/5
Bursa Translation
Only take FCPO trades when several factors align: a supportive market tone in MYR-denominated contracts during Bursa hours, constructive price action on the chart for the 25‑MT lot contracts, and confirmation from fundamentals such as MPOB production/stock updates and seasonal demand patterns (monsoon/harvest cycles, festive demand).
Also require confirmation from related spreads (CPO vs soybean oil) and a precise entry that fits your lot-based position sizing and risk rules to avoid impulsive retail behavior.
Bottom Line In Practice
Enter long a nearby FCPO contract after MPOB reports falling stocks, daily chart breaks to a new high during Bursa trading hours, and a narrowing CPO/soybean oil spread, sizing the trade in whole 25‑MT lots with a predefined MYR stop-loss.
Minervini argues that trading success comes from setting up repeatable processes — scouting likely leaders, waiting for the market and a stock’s chart to align, defining precise entries and exits, and enforcing tight risk control — rather than trying to forecast every move.
He stresses watching volatility and overall market tone and only becoming aggressive when both the environment and the individual chart give confirmation.
This approach prioritizes preparation, timing and disciplined trade management so outcomes are driven by rules and execution instead of prediction luck.
FCPO ApplicationRelevance 5/5
Bursa Translation
Preparation over prediction for FCPO means building repeatable entry, exit and risk rules that account for 25‑MT contract sizing and MYR settlement, MPOB monthly reports, monsoon-driven production cycles and seasonal festive demand rather than guessing prices.
Focus on timing trades within Bursa Malaysia hours, managing lot-based position sizing, watching CPO/soybean oil spreads and having contingency plans for high-volatility MPOB surprises.
Bottom Line In Practice
Enter one 25‑MT long FCPO lot after MPOB shows a 5% drop in stocks versus last month, size stops to limit loss to 1% of portfolio value and monitor CPO/SBO spread for exit signals.
Minervini insists that repeatable success depends less on predicting markets and more on following exact entry/exit rules, strict sizing, and defined stop limits so each trade is measurable and survivable.
He emphasizes waiting for multiple confirmations — the right market tone, a leading stock, constructive chart behavior, and a specific entry — rather than forcing trades when indices merely look strong.
The practical point is to combine precise execution with tight risk control and routine post-trade review so outcomes become consistent and losses remain limited.
FCPO ApplicationRelevance 5/5
Bursa Translation
On Bursa Malaysia, apply precise execution and tight risk controls using FCPO’s 25‑MT lot size and MYR denomination: predefine entry/exit orders, maximum MYR risk per contract and stop levels so each trade fits within daily Malaysian market hours and your account limits.
Incorporate palm oil seasonality, MPOB monthly data releases and CPO/soybean oil spread signals into your execution plan so position sizing and stops adjust before known volatility events (e.
g.
, monsoon harvest shifts or festive demand spikes).
Bottom Line In Practice
Before the MPOB report, risk no more than MYR 5,000 per 25‑MT contract, place a limit entry and a hard stop 2% away, and widen or reduce size only if the CPO/soybean oil spread signals sustained strength.
Minervini places post-trade review as an explicit part of his trading workflow: after a trade is closed or a plan is executed, you systematically analyze what happened versus your rules — entries, exits, sizing, risk management and emotional decisions.
This review is used to identify where the process broke down (or held up), capture lessons about chart behavior and market context, and refine the mechanical rules and personal discipline that guide future trades.
By making review a repeatable step alongside screening, precise entries and tight risk control, the trader converts individual outcomes into continuous process improvement.
FCPO ApplicationRelevance 5/5
Bursa Translation
After each FCPO trade, document entry/exit prices (in MYR), lot size (25 MT), time within Bursa trading hours, and compare outcomes to MPOB reports, seasonal monsoon/harvest expectations, and CPO/soybean oil spread moves to identify systematic edge or mistakes.
Use these post-trade reviews to refine signals, position sizing and discipline—for example noting if a loss came from ignoring a weak MPOB export number or crowd-driven late-session retail behavior—so future trades better account for Bursa market structure and seasonal fundamentals.
Bottom Line In Practice
After closing a 2-lot (50 MT) short position at 3,800 MYR following a surprise MPOB production increase, record that the trade failed because you ignored weakening CPO/soybean oil spreads and reduced position size for the next similar setup.
Minervini warns against increasing position size or trading aggressiveness solely because major indexes are rising.
He looks for confirmation from multiple dimensions—diminished volatility, supportive overall market tone, and constructive behavior on the individual stock’s chart—before committing more capital.
The point is to require alignment across market environment, volatility regime, and the specific chart pattern rather than relying on index strength as a single green light.
This lowers the chance of getting caught in short-lived rallies or volatile market conditions that can wipe out gains.
FCPO ApplicationRelevance 5/5
Bursa Translation
Do not increase FCPO lot size or trade aggression simply because regional indices or CPO benchmarks are strong; require confirmation from volatility metrics (e.
g.
, lower ATR or tightening intraday ranges), alignment with MPOB data or seasonal production patterns, and clear price structure on the FCPO chart.
Also check related signals such as CPO/soybean oil spread tightening and Malaysian market-hour behavior before adding lots, remembering each FCPO contract is 25 MT and position changes multiply exposure in MYR terms.
Bottom Line In Practice
Instead of buying a third FCPO lot because the KLCI is up, wait for a daily close above resistance with ATR contracting and a favorable MPOB monthly stock/supply report—only then increase from 1 to 2 lots (25 MT to 50 MT).