your goal is not to try to come up with some type of strategy that figures out where these peaks are going to be
Minervini emphasizes that after you enter a trade at your defined buy point, the future path of the stock can move up or down and you should not waste effort trying to predict exact peaks or how far a run will continue.
Trading success comes from having a repeatable entry and risk management plan, not from forecasting tops or timing the ultimate high.
Focusing on precise peak predictions leads to indecision or poor risk control, whereas accepting that prices will fluctuate lets you concentrate on position sizing, stop-losses, and letting winners run within a disciplined framework.
As an FCPO trader on Bursa Malaysia, don’t waste effort trying to predict exact top prices for CPO — you trade the contract’s trend and risk management within its MYR quote and 25‑MT lot structure.
Let seasonality (monsoon, harvest cycles, festive demand), MPOB releases, and CPO/soybean oil spread signals guide entries and exits, while respecting Malaysian market hours and liquidity rather than guessing peaks.
Focus on disciplined position sizing, stops and reacting to market structure; let the market tell you when a peak is forming, don’t try to invent it.
Example: You monitor FCPO contract (25 MT lot, MYR) ahead of an MPOB production report.
Instead of forecasting the absolute peak, you wait for a confirmed upside breakout during Bursa hours with above‑average volume and a tightening CPO/SBO spread indicating firm vegetable oil demand.
You enter 1 lot at MYR 4,200/MT with a stop at MYR 4,080 (risk MYR 3,000 = 25 MT * 120 MYR) and a profit target based on technical resistance or seasonal patterns.
If MPOB surprises with much higher output and price quickly reverses through your stop, you accept the controlled loss and reassess—this preserves capital to trade the next clear trend rather than holding out for a predicted peak.