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You know, I've been diving deep into trading histories lately, and there's this fascinating figure that keeps coming up in conversations among serious market participants: Takashi Kotegawa, the guy behind the BNF handle. His story is wild, but not in the flashy way most people talk about trading success.
This guy started with basically nothing—just $15,000 from his mother's inheritance in early 2000s Tokyo. No finance degree, no connections, no trust fund backing him up. What he had instead was something way more valuable: an obsessive work ethic and the mental discipline to stick to a system when everyone else was losing their minds.
What really grabbed me about his journey was how he approached the chaos. In 2005, when the Livedoor scandal hit and that infamous Mizuho fat finger incident happened (where someone accidentally sold 610,000 shares at 1 yen instead of the intended price), most traders either froze or panic-sold. Kotegawa? He saw it differently. He recognized the pattern, understood the psychology, and moved fast. Made $17 million in minutes because he'd prepared for exactly this kind of moment.
But here's the thing—the Takashi Kotegawa strategy wasn't complicated. It was pure technical analysis. He ignored earnings reports, CEO gossip, all that fundamental stuff. His entire focus was price action, volume, and patterns. Find oversold stocks, watch for reversals using RSI and moving averages, enter with precision, exit with zero emotion. That's it. No ego, no hope, no hesitation when a trade went against him.
What separates him from 99% of traders? Emotional control. He had this quote that stuck with me: if you focus too much on money, you can't be successful. He treated trading like a precision game, not a path to quick riches. A well-managed loss was worth more to him than a lucky win because discipline compounds but luck doesn't.
His daily routine was insanely simple—monitoring 600-700 stocks, managing 30-70 positions, working from before sunrise past midnight. Instant noodles for food, no luxury cars, no parties. His one big purchase was a $100 million building in Akihabara, but even that was portfolio diversification, not flexing.
What's wild is how relevant this feels for crypto traders right now. Yeah, markets have changed, technology is different, but the core principles? They're exactly what's missing. Everyone's chasing overnight gains based on influencer tips and Discord hype, while the real money gets made by people actually studying charts and sticking to systems.
The Takashi Kotegawa strategy teaches something most miss: avoid the noise, trust data over narratives, cut losses ruthlessly, let winners run. In a world obsessed with likes and followers, he understood that silence is power. More thinking, fewer distractions, sharper edge.
Honestly, his story reminds me that great traders aren't born—they're built through relentless discipline and honest work. If you're serious about this, study price action, build a system you actually believe in, execute it consistently, and stay humble. The results will follow.