[Tomorrow's Nikkei Average Prediction AI] To Investors Saying 'My Analysis is Correct, But I Can't Win'... The 'One Single Difference' Between Pros and Retail Investors
A promotional piece for an AI investment judgment support app. It points out that retail investors fail to win because they lack consistent judgment criteria, not analysis skills, and emphasizes the usefulness of AI tools in eliminating emotional trading.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 4, 2026 at 02:04
- 🔍 Collected: April 4, 2026 at 05:30 (3h 26m after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 02:33 (405h 2m after Collected)
'My market direction is right, but somehow I don't retain profits.'
Have you ever experienced this?
- You bought because you thought it would go up -> It actually went up.
- But you sold halfway through, and the profit is small.
Alternatively,
- You judged it would go down -> It actually went down.
- But your entry was late, and you missed the profit.
These 'discrepancies' are common to many retail investors.
So, why does this happen?
The Phenomenon of 'Not Wrong, But Can't Win'
Many investors certainly do not trade purely on feeling.
- Checking the news
- Understanding economic trends
- Conducting chart analysis
In other words,
**In many cases, the judgment itself is not wrong.**
But in reality,
**The results are unstable.**
The Problem is Not the 'Analysis', but 'How it is Used'
The essence of this discrepancy is,
**It lies not in the accuracy of the analysis, but in the 'usage' of the judgment.**
Many retail investors are in a state where:
- Entry is decided by logic
- Stop-loss is decided by emotion
- Profit-taking is judged on the spot
Investing is Determined by 'Consistency'
Originally, investing needs to be designed as a set of:
- When to enter
- When to exit
- How much loss to tolerate
However,
**If the judgment changes each time,**
then,
**Reproducibility is not born.**
The 'Decisive Difference' Between Pros and Individuals
There is a clear difference here.
**Pros have a 'standard of judgment'.**
Pros define in advance:
- Under what conditions to enter
- Under what conditions to pass
- Under what conditions to retreat
On the other hand, retail investors tend to fall into a flow of:
**Information -> Judgment -> Action**
The Market is 'No Longer Simple'
The current market is a 'multi-layered structure' where multiple factors move simultaneously:
- Interest rates
- Foreign exchange
- Foreign capital
- Corporate performance
- Geopolitics
Therefore,
**Multiple correct analyses exist.**
In other words,
'Which one to adopt...
Have you ever experienced this?
- You bought because you thought it would go up -> It actually went up.
- But you sold halfway through, and the profit is small.
Alternatively,
- You judged it would go down -> It actually went down.
- But your entry was late, and you missed the profit.
These 'discrepancies' are common to many retail investors.
So, why does this happen?
The Phenomenon of 'Not Wrong, But Can't Win'
Many investors certainly do not trade purely on feeling.
- Checking the news
- Understanding economic trends
- Conducting chart analysis
In other words,
**In many cases, the judgment itself is not wrong.**
But in reality,
**The results are unstable.**
The Problem is Not the 'Analysis', but 'How it is Used'
The essence of this discrepancy is,
**It lies not in the accuracy of the analysis, but in the 'usage' of the judgment.**
Many retail investors are in a state where:
- Entry is decided by logic
- Stop-loss is decided by emotion
- Profit-taking is judged on the spot
Investing is Determined by 'Consistency'
Originally, investing needs to be designed as a set of:
- When to enter
- When to exit
- How much loss to tolerate
However,
**If the judgment changes each time,**
then,
**Reproducibility is not born.**
The 'Decisive Difference' Between Pros and Individuals
There is a clear difference here.
**Pros have a 'standard of judgment'.**
Pros define in advance:
- Under what conditions to enter
- Under what conditions to pass
- Under what conditions to retreat
On the other hand, retail investors tend to fall into a flow of:
**Information -> Judgment -> Action**
The Market is 'No Longer Simple'
The current market is a 'multi-layered structure' where multiple factors move simultaneously:
- Interest rates
- Foreign exchange
- Foreign capital
- Corporate performance
- Geopolitics
Therefore,
**Multiple correct analyses exist.**
In other words,
'Which one to adopt...