Every day, traders ask the same question:
“Is this the top?”
“Is this the bottom?”
And the truth is, about 90% of the time, they’re trying to call a turning point.
It makes sense.
Catching the exact top or bottom feels like the ultimate trade. High reward. Perfect timing. Maximum bragging rights.
But in prop trading, this approach is also one of the fastest ways to hit your drawdown limits.
Because when you try to pick tops and bottoms, you are going against momentum, sentiment, and trend.
That’s a tough fight.
If you want to do it successfully, you need to avoid these 5 common mistakes.
1. Trading Too Large
This is the number one account killer.
The reality is simple:
You will almost never nail the exact top or bottom on the first try.
When you size too big:
You increase emotional pressure
You reduce flexibility
You risk blowing your account before the trade works
Prop trading reality:
Large positions + early entries = fast drawdown violations
Smart approach:
Start small. Build into confirmation, not hope.
2. Adding to Losing Trades
Averaging down feels logical… but in this context, it’s dangerous.
When you’re picking tops or bottoms, you’re already:
Trading against trend
Trading early
Trading without confirmation
Adding to a losing position:
Compounds risk
Assumes you’re right
Ignores what the market is telling you
Better rule:
Add to winners, not losers
If the market proves you right, then scale. Not before.
3. Stops That Are Too Tight
This is where many good ideas turn into bad trades.
Markets don’t reverse cleanly.
They spike. They run stops. They overshoot.
Common mistakes:
Placing stops exactly at swing highs/lows
Using round numbers (like 150.00 in USD/JPY)
What often happens:
Price pushes 10–20 pips beyond your stop
Then reverses exactly as you expected
Smart approach:
Give your trade breathing room
Think beyond obvious levels
Assume liquidity hunts are real (because they are)
4. Mistaking Consolidation for a Reversal
Not all sideways price action is a turning point.
Sometimes the market is just:
Waiting for a catalyst
Pricing in a major event
Pausing before continuation
Examples:
FOMC decisions
CPI releases
Geopolitical headlines
Entering early during consolidation without context is a trap.
Key question to ask:
“Is this a top… or just a pause before the next move?”
5. Refusing to Be Wrong
This is the most dangerous mistake of all.
Markets can stay:
Overbought
Oversold
Irrational
…longer than your account can survive.
What traders do:
Hold and hope
Ignore invalidation
Wait for “eventual” reversal
But here’s the truth:
You can be right on direction and still lose money on timing
And in prop trading, timing is everything.
Best mindset:
Accept small losses quickly
Re-enter when conditions improve
Stay flexible, not stubborn
The Reality of Trading Tops & Bottoms
Picking tops and bottoms is not impossible.
But it’s advanced.
And more importantly:
It’s far more effective to trade reversals with the trend, not against it.
Instead of calling the exact turning point, focus on:
Confirmation
Structure breaks
Momentum shifts
Final Takeaway for Prop Traders
If you’re trading with a prop firm, your goal is not to be a hero.
Your goal is to:
Protect capital
Stay within drawdown limits
Build consistency
Trying to “call the top” with size is the opposite of that.
Trade smarter:
Smaller size
Better timing
Clear invalidation