Adrian Reid

Adrian is a full-time private trader based in Australia and also the Founder and Trading Coach at Enlightened Stock Trading, which focuses on educating and supporting traders on their journey to profitable systems trading. Following his successful adoption of systematic trading which generated him hundreds of thousands of dollars a year using just 30 minutes a day to manage his system trading workflow, Adrian made the easy decision to leave his professional work in the corporate world in 2012. Adrian trades long/short across US, Australian and international stock markets and the cryptocurrency markets. His trading systems are now fully automated and have consistently outperformed international share markets with dramatically reduced risk over the past 20+ years. Adrian focuses on building portfolios of profitable, stable and robust long term trading systems to beat market returns with high risk adjusted returns. Adrian teaches traders from all over the world how to get profitable, confident and consistent by trading systematically and backtesting their own trading systems. He helps profitable traders grow and smooth returns by implementing a portfolio of trading systems to make money from different markets and market conditions.
How to Use Fibonacci Time Zones for Smarter Trade Timing

How to Use Fibonacci Time Zones for Smarter Trade Timing

Fibonacci Time Zones are a technical analysis tool that traders use to project potential price reversals at specific time intervals. Unlike traditional indicators that focus on price movement, Fibonacci Time Zones provide traders with a structured way to anticipate when significant market shifts might occur. A useful analogy is road signs on a highway. Just as signs alert drivers to upcoming...

Survivorship Bias in Trading: Why Most ‘Proven’ Strategies Are Misleading

Survivorship Bias in Trading: Why Most ‘Proven’ Strategies Are Misleading

Survivorship bias is the tendency to focus only on successful examples while ignoring those that failed. This logical error leads investors to overestimate mutual fund performance, hedge fund indexes, and stock portfolios by ignoring unsuccessful funds and companies—a common distortion discussed in trading psychology. It’s like reading about billionaires and thinking their strategies guarantee...

The Truth About Blind Spot Bias in Trading & How to Overcome It

The Truth About Blind Spot Bias in Trading & How to Overcome It

Think about how easier it is to judge a situation when you’re not the one in it. Consider how quickly we notice mistakes in others, whether it’s a friend making a bad financial decision, a colleague mishandling a project, or a trader holding onto a losing stock for too long. But when we’re in the same position, we often justify our actions, convinced that we see things clearly. This is due to...

Hurst Cycles Explained: Unlock the Secrets of Market Timing

Hurst Cycles Explained: Unlock the Secrets of Market Timing

Markets may seem chaotic, but price movements often follow natural cycles. The Hurst Cycle, named after American engineer J.M. Hurst, provides a framework for understanding stock market cycles and improving trade timing. By analyzing cyclic theory, traders can identify price peaks, price troughs, and key turning points across multiple time frames, from the daily chart to the weekly cycle. This...

Trading with Percentage of Stocks Above Moving Average Made Easy

Trading with Percentage of Stocks Above Moving Average Made Easy

The percentage of stocks trading above a moving average is a market breadth indicator that measures how many stocks in an index or market are trading above a specific moving average level. Market analysts and investors use this metric to assess the overall strength or weakness of the market. To put this in simpler terms, imagine you are looking at a race where hundreds of runners are competing....

Paralysis by Analysis in Trading: Why More Data Doesn’t Mean Better Trades

Paralysis by Analysis in Trading: Why More Data Doesn’t Mean Better Trades

Paralysis by analysis occurs when overthinking leads to inaction. A trader sits surrounded by six monitors, each crowded with charts, indicators, and news feeds. They've spent three hours analyzing a potential trade, checking every timeframe, reading dozens of analyses, and still haven't placed the order. Meanwhile, the perfect setup they spotted hours ago has already moved without them. This...

Choice-Supportive Bias in Trading: How to Stay Objective & Avoid Costly Mistakes

Choice-Supportive Bias in Trading: How to Stay Objective & Avoid Costly Mistakes

Choice-supportive bias is the tendency to justify past strategic decisions retroactively by exaggerating their benefits and downplaying their flaws. This might look like someone buying an overpriced car and later convincing themselves it was a “great deal” despite better options. This is one of many cognitive biases explored in trading psychology that influence financial decisions and impact...

Overconfidence Bias in Trading: How to Trade with Confidence, Not Arrogance

Overconfidence Bias in Trading: How to Trade with Confidence, Not Arrogance

Overconfidence bias is the tendency for individuals to overestimate their knowledge, skills, or control over outcomes. According to research, overconfidence is usually driven by other cognitive biases, such as self-attribution bias, optimism bias, and the illusion of control bias. The same paper found that the illusion of control was the strongest predictor of risk-taking and investment decision...

Breaking Free from Outcome Bias in Trading for Smarter Decisions

Breaking Free from Outcome Bias in Trading for Smarter Decisions

Outcome bias happens when traders judge the quality of a decision based solely on the result, not the process behind it. Imagine driving home drunk and arriving safely. Was it a good trade? Of course not. The outcome was positive, but the decision-making process was flawed. Most traders would celebrate a colleague who bet their entire account on a single cryptocurrency trade and doubled their...

How Zero-Risk Bias in Trading Leads to Missed Opportunities

How Zero-Risk Bias in Trading Leads to Missed Opportunities

Zero-risk bias is the human tendency to prefer absolute certainty, even when it’s not the most rational choice. These cognitive biases stem from an adaptive tendency to minimize unnecessary risks, even at the expense of long-term rewards—a concept frequently explored in trading psychology. It’s why people choose a “guaranteed” small win over a higher potential reward with minor menace, often...

Overcoming Status Quo Bias in Trading for Better Market Decisions

Overcoming Status Quo Bias in Trading for Better Market Decisions

Status quo bias is our natural tendency to prefer things as they are, even when change might lead to potential benefits. It’s the reason an investor sticks with an outdated phone, stays in an unfulfilling job, or keeps an underperforming stock. This bias is one of the most prevalent behavioral biases affecting financial products and the stock market—and it's a recurring topic in trading...