简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
اردو
The 3-Bullet Rule: How a Paper Card Stops Overtrading
Abstract:Many beginner traders struggle with overtrading, rapidly clicking buy and sell to chase market movements or recover losses. The 3-Bullet Rule is a simple, physical strategy designed to stop this destructive habit. By limiting yourself to just three trades a day, you can bypass the psychological traps of the sunk cost fallacy and regain control over your trading discipline.

Many beginner Forex traders in Malaysia start their evening trading session with a clear plan. You wait for a good setup, place your trade, and hope for the best. But when that first trade loses, something changes. You enter a second trade to make the money back. Then a third, because the market is moving fast. Before midnight, you have opened 15 trades, wiping out a large chunk of your capital.
This is overtrading. It is the fastest way to blow a trading account, and it happens because we simply cannot step away from the screen.
To solve this, experienced day traders sometimes use a very rigid, physical system. It is called the “3-Bullet Rule.”
How the 3-Bullet Execution Sheet Works
The method is deliberately low-tech. Every day before you open your trading platform, you take a small blank card and draw three empty circles on it. These are your “bullet holes.”
Each time you execute a trade, you take a pen and completely shade in one of the circles. It does not matter if the trade hits your take-profit or your stop-loss. Once the order is placed, one bullet is gone.
When you have colored in the third and final circle, you are out of ammo. You must immediately close your charts and turn off your computer. You do not analyze the market anymore, and you do not look at your phone. Your trading day is officially over.
The Trap of Sunk Costs and Revenge Trading
Why do you need a physical card to tell you to stop? Because human psychology is not built for the constant ups and downs of the financial markets.
Behavioral economists focus heavily on a concept known as the Sunk Cost Fallacy. As humans, we suffer from loss aversion. This means we feel the pain of losing money much more intensely than the happiness of making money.
When a beginner loses a trade, their brain registers that missing money as a “sunk cost” that must be recovered immediately. The failure to accept that a loss is simply part of trading causes people to dig their heels in. You pour more of your account balance into terrible trade setups just to prove you were right.
In game theory, there is also a behavior pattern called “tit for tat,” which essentially means retailiation. When the market takes your money, your immediate emotional response is to hit back. You want to punish the market for behaving irrationally. The 3-Bullet Rule physically stops you from engaging in this unwinnable fight. Once your three bullets are spent, the screen goes dark, forcing you to walk away before retaliation destroys your account.
Surviving Market Sentiment
It is also incredibly easy to get swept up in crowd psychology. Market sentiment is the overall mood of traders—the fear and greed that drive prices up and down.
When you watch a currency pair pushing strongly in one direction, you feel the momentum. You see the price moving, and the fear of missing out pushes you to click “buy.” Market sentiment can change rapidly, and if you have unlimited attempts to trade, you will find yourself jumping in and out of the market trying to catch every swing.
The 3-Bullet Rule grounds you. When you know you only have three shots for the entire day, you naturally become more defensive. You stop firing at random momentum spikes. You start analyzing deeper. You wait patiently for a setup that actually matches your strategy, because you do not want to waste a precious bullet on a mediocre guess.
Protecting Your Capital
A profitable trader is not someone who catches every market move. A profitable trader is someone who protects their capital and manages their emotional responses.
Printing a daily card and drawing three circles might feel silly at first. But for a beginner, creating a hard physical barrier between yourself and the trading platform is often the only way to break the cycle of overtrading. It teaches you patience, forces you to confront the sunk cost fallacy, and trains you to value quality over quantity.
As you build this physical discipline, remember to protect your capital off the charts as well. Before you deposit your money to fire those three daily bullets, you need to know your funds are sitting with a safe platform. You can use the WikiFX app to quickly check your broker's regulatory status and license details, ensuring your hard-earned trading capital is held in a trusted environment.


Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
