TimelessMarket Theory
Educational only — not financial advice. Intraday and professional trading carry high risk; most day traders lose money. These lessons teach a process to study and test, never a recommendation or guarantee.
Professional Desk · Lesson

The desk-rules system

The hard limits that keep professionals in business — and a one-page risk contract you can sign today.

Method from Mike Bellafiore (SMB Capital) · ← Back to course

1 Why this matters

Rules beat predictions

Most developing traders have an edge somewhere but no rules around it — so a few bad days, or one tilting afternoon, undoes weeks of good work.

Professional desks solve this not with better predictions but with a system of hard limits that govern behavior. The rules are decided while calm, written down, and enforced — so that no single day, week, or emotional spike can do lasting damage. This is the most important lesson in the course.

2 Layered loss limits

A maximum loss at every timescale

A professional sets a maximum loss at every timescale, not just per trade:

At SMB these limits are agreed in advance with a risk manager and documented in writing. You are your own risk manager — so write yours down and treat them as non-negotiable.

3 The A+ Rule of Risk

Don't under-bet your best ideas

The flip side of capping losses is not under-betting your best ideas. The Rule of Risk sets a minimum size you must take when a genuine A+ setup appears (SMB asks traders to put a defined share of their intraday stop on every A+). The point: when everything lines up, fear shouldn't make you trade it small. Press your best, skip your worst.

4 Cap losers, not winners

The structural source of an edge

Cap losers at a fixed stop — let winners run Loser: capped at −1R stop = −1R (never more) Winner: runs to +3R and beyond +3R… let it run Hit your daily loss limit? Stop trading for the day.
A loss is capped automatically at −1R by a stop placed before entry; a winner is allowed to run. The occasional large, uncapped winner pays for the many small, fixed losers.

The amateur instinct is the exact reverse — snatch small profits, let losers grow. The discipline is to invert it.

5 Quality over quantity

Overtrading drains accounts

Overtrading, not a weak strategy, quietly drains most accounts. On a difficult day you “let your foot off the gas,” wait only for the very best setups, and accept that some days the right number of trades is small — or zero. A self-imposed cap on trades, or a rule to stop after two rule-breaks, protects you from yourself.

6 Grade by process, not outcome

A good trade can still lose

A good trade followed your plan — right setup, correct size, stop honored, exit by rule — even if it lost. A bad trade broke your rules even if it won. You log and repeat good trades and eliminate bad ones, regardless of P&L. Over a large sample, process quality, not any single result, predicts performance. The next lesson builds this into a grading system.

7 Your one-page risk contract

Write it, sign it, obey it

The risk contract (assignment)

Max loss per trade: $____ (= ____% of account, my 1R) Max loss per day: $____ → when hit, I STOP for the day Max loss per week: $____ → when hit, I cut size by half Max loss per month: $____ → when hit, I pause and review Max trades per day: ____ (and: stop after 2 rule-breaks) A+ Rule of Risk: I take at least ____ size on a true A+ setup Winners: I scale out / trail — I never cap winners Losers: fixed stop before entry — never averaged down

Fill this in, keep it visible at your desk, and treat breaking it as the real mistake — not the losing trade.