Why I'm focusing on short selling low-Float stocks
The market is constantly evolving. What works exceptionally well five years ago may not be the highest-probability strategy today. Successful traders don't become attached to one method-they adapt. Right now, after thousands of hours of studying price action, I found that one of the best opportunities is identifying exhaustion in low-float stocks that had become irrationally extended. These stocks often make explosive moves fueled by momentum, emotion, fear of missing out, and social media attention. Eventually, however, That buying pressure begins to fade. My goal isn't to predict the exact top. My goal is to recognize when the probability starts shifting back in favor of the downside.
To me, short selling isn't about betting against companies or hoping people lose money. It's about understanding crowd psychology. Every parabolic move eventually reaches a point where buyers become exhausted, early traders begin taking profits, and new buyers are paying increasingly higher prices for the same stock. That's where patience becomes an edge. Instead of chasing excitement, I wait for the emotional frenzy to begin fading. The market rewards discipline far more often than excitement.
The philosophy behind my trading is simple: Adapt to what the market is offering today, not what is offered yesterday. If conditions change tomorrow, I'll change with them. My loyalty isn't to being long or short-it's to probability, risk management, and continuous learning. Trading, to me, is much more than making money. It's the lifelong pursuit suit of understanding markets, human behavior, and my own emotions. The greatest edge isn't predicting the future, it's remaining objective while everyone else is reacting emotionally.