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Just been reading about Takashi Kotegawa again, and honestly his story still hits different. This guy basically proved you don't need massive capital to dominate markets if you actually know what you're doing.
So the guy started with just 1.6 million yen back in 2001, which was basically pocket change compared to institutional traders. But here's the thing - he wasn't trying to be a hero. Kotegawa had this almost obsessive focus on one thing: high-liquidity day trades on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. No overnight holds, no gap risk gambling. Just pure intraday momentum plays on volatile stocks.
The nickname BNF came from a stock code he loved trading, and it stuck. What fascinated me most about Takashi Kotegawa's approach wasn't the flashy wins - it was the discipline. While most traders were chasing overnight gaps or holding through earnings, he was already flat before market close. That's not exciting, but it's profitable.
Takashi Kotegawa basically wrote the playbook on what precision trading actually means. High liquidity, strict risk management, and knowing exactly when to step away. No ego, no revenge trading. Just mechanics.
The wild part? He did this during Japan's downturn when volatility was insane. Most people saw chaos. He saw opportunity in the noise. That's the difference between someone who makes money and someone who actually builds a fortune.
If you're serious about trading, his story is worth studying - not for the get-rich-quick fantasy, but for understanding what actual market mastery looks like.