What This Is
This is what trading actually looks like when you write everything down.
It is less cinematic than you think. It is also more profitable.
This is a public logbook. Every week I run the Wheel Strategy on US equities, analyzing setups, executing trades, collecting premium, managing positions, and occasionally getting it wrong. The newsletter is where I write all of it down: the thesis going in, the outcome coming out, and the lesson that connects the two.
You are not getting a signal. You are getting a process.
What You Get Every Monday
A structured weekly log with the same format every time, so you know exactly what to expect and where to find what you need.
Who This Is For
You are tired of staring at charts for six hours and ending up more confused than when you started.
You have heard of the Wheel Strategy but want to see someone actually run it, not explain it once and disappear.
You want to understand the decision-making behind entry, exit, sizing, and risk, not copy someone else's trades and hope for the best.
You are not looking for a guru. You are looking for a logbook you can learn from.
The difference matters. One of them charges a monthly fee to tell you what you already suspected.
If that is you, you are in the right place.
Why Subscribe Instead of Reading the Archive
The archive is free, public, and indexed. You can read every past issue without signing up.
Subscribers get the current week's log delivered Monday morning, before the setups are no longer relevant, before the market has already moved, while the watchlist is still operational.
The archive is the library. The newsletter is the live feed.
One is for studying the process. The other is for running it.
What This Is Not
Not a signal service. Not a trade recommendation. Not a course with a waitlist and a countdown timer.
No one here is trying to sell you a five-thousand-dollar program from inside a rented supercar. If you want that, the internet has no shortage of options. This is not one of them.
This is a researcher's logbook, published weekly, for free, because transparent process is more useful than polished performance.
This is where you see the ones that didn't — and why.