September 25, 2025
*Bob Iaccino, Chief Market Strategist and Co-Founder of Path Trading Partners, joins us live every Thursday from 11am ET, as our risk management educator. With 30 years' experience working as an active investor in equities, commodities, futures and FX there are few better to talk on the subject of risk management.
Bob has developed a method for breaking down his key fundamentals of risk management, in a way that he thinks retail traders can understand and use to get actionable insights to bring into their own trading. Below are some excerpts of Bob’s thoughts from a recent live session.
Nonfarm payroll Fridays can feel like a roller coaster. Years of trading them taught me two things. The first impulse after the headline usually is not the real move. The second is that Friday’s direction is often not the path the market follows the following week. That is why I use Friday as reconnaissance and Monday as confirmation.
Going into this one, futures markets were already pricing in a very high chance of a rate cut at the next policy meeting. Recent central bank commentary leaned the same way, with several officials signaling that labor conditions and wages justify easing.
The jobs report reinforced that view. Payrolls missed, the broader jobless rate ticked up, and wage growth cooled. That combination supports the case for cuts but also whispers that growth is slowing.
When that mix hits the tape, you often get what we saw intraday: a fast drop, a bounce, and a lot of confusion. I do not chase that noise. I mark the day’s extremes and plan to let Monday tell me if buyers or sellers truly have control. Historically, when Friday reverses its first move, Monday tends to set the tone for several sessions. I want to trade that tone, not the noise.
My favorite confirmation tool here is a modified Percent B setup that lives on my TradeZero charts. The idea is simple. When the Percent B histogram drops below zero, I look for the next session to close above the prior close with an up candle. That gives me a high-probability long in a broad index.
I place my stop on a close below the low of the trigger day, not on an intraday poke. That close-only rule is the backbone of my process because it filters out the emotional wicks that jobs Fridays love to print.
This week, the tech-heavy index flashed that exact pattern midweek. If I were trading a basket, I would have entered near the close on the trigger day with size based on my dollar risk per trade. For example, if my stop from entry to the trigger-day low equates to roughly 3 to 4 percent, I scale share count so that a full stop still equals my fixed risk number. With TradeZero’s order ticket, it takes seconds to build that with a bracket that uses a closing stop plan. I also set a price alert on the trigger-day low so I know to evaluate into the close if we threaten it.
The market can sit a few percent off all-time highs and still feel chaotic. The cure for that fear is not predicting the next headline. It is sizing positions so you can survive being wrong. My average swing hold is about 26 days. That means I must be comfortable holding through several sessions that do not go my way. Since I keep my dollar risk constant, a wider stop simply means fewer shares. A narrower stop means more shares. Either way, the dollars at risk are the same.
TradeZero’s Risk Controls panel and the position calculator make that arithmetic fast, which lets me focus on execution rather than second-guessing.
Support and resistance are not magical. They are memories. The more times price respects a level across months rather than hours, the more traders have anchored decisions there. When I mark a stop or a target, I prefer a level that shows repeated reactions across cycles, not just yesterday’s low. TradeZero’s drawing tools help me anchor horizontal lines and trend lines to those multi-month reactions, then I save them to a watchlist layout so they travel with the symbol. If a level aligns with a moving average cluster or a measured pattern, all the better.
A quick word on psychology, because it matters here. I do not buy or short because I love or dislike a brand, a campaign, or a mission. Active trading is a craft, not a vote. If a story changes behavior and the chart confirms it, I trade it. If I have a personal aversion to a company, I simply exclude it from my universe. What I do not do is force a trade to match my beliefs. The market does not care about my opinions, only my risk.
Every Friday afternoon, I run the same routine in TradeZero:
That routine keeps me from forcing trades Monday morning. It also lets me react quickly if Monday confirms Friday’s reversal.
Here is a structure I am watching without naming names. Think of a large warehouse club retailer that competes on price and membership value. These businesses tend to hold up when consumers grow more price sensitive. On the daily chart, price just completed a clean double-bottom trigger, popped toward short-term resistance, and now looks ready to offer a pullback entry.
How I would frame it using TradeZero:
In TradeZero, I save this as a template with a staged bracket: buy stop above the zone, profit target at the moving average, and a closing-basis exit plan managed by alerts. That keeps my clicks minimal when price is moving.
Monday matters. If Friday reversed its first move, I want to see whether institutions defend that reversal with a higher close in the broad indices. If the tech-heavy index holds above the trigger-day close from my Percent B setup, I will continue to hold index exposure and look for pullbacks in leaders. If we undercut the trigger-day low and close there, I respect the signal and step aside. There will always be another setup. My job is to protect my edge.
Keep your risk per trade fixed. Use closing data for exits whenever your plan allows. Let Monday confirm or deny what Friday teased. And remember that in markets where rate cuts are likely because growth is cooling, companies that compete on price often get the benefit of the doubt. Let the charts confirm that story before you act, then let your sizing carry you through the noise.
This Blog (hereafter referred to as the “Content”) is produced by TradeZero. The Content may include the views and opinions of TradeZero and a third-party participant, Bob Iaccino. Bob Iaccino is compensated by TradeZero for participating in the Content. Mr. Iaccino’s trading experiences and accomplishments are unique, and your trading results may vary substantially from his. TradeZero is not responsible for and neither affirms nor endorses any of Mr. Iaccino’s views or opinions expressed in the Content. TradeZero makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy of the Content or information available through any referenced or linked third party sites. The Content has been made available for informational and educational purposes only and should not be considered trading or investment advice or a recommendation as to any security.
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