Why Traders Lose More Money on Monday MorningsUS Tech 100 Cash ($100)IG:NASDAQTrade_Logic_AIWhy Traders Lose More Money on Monday Mornings A trader opens a position at 9:35 AM on Monday. An hour later, closes with a stop loss. Same trader, same strategy, but Wednesday afternoon. Opposite result. Coincidence? No. The market changes not just in price. It changes in mood, speed, and aggression of participants. And this depends on time. Monday Morning: When Emotions Rule The weekend is over. Traders have accumulated news, opinions, fears. The first hour of trading resembles a crowd at a sale. Everyone wants to enter first. The problem is decisions are made on emotions, not analysis. Volatility spikes. Spreads widen. False breakouts happen more often. Research shows: Monday brings traders the highest proportion of losing trades for the week. Psychology works against you from the start. Asian Session vs American At 3 AM Moscow time, Tokyo opens. Movements are smooth, predictable. Ranges are narrow. Then London joins. Speed increases. Volumes triple. New York adds chaos. From 4:30 PM to 6:00 PM MSK, the market becomes a battlefield. US news overlaps with European position closures. Different sessions require different psychology. Asia loves patience. Europe demands speed. America tests nerves. Friday Afternoon: Trap for the Greedy By Friday, traders are tired. More decisions made than the entire week. Willpower reserves are depleted. After lunch, many just want to close the week. Mass position closing begins. Trends break. Patterns stop working. But the most dangerous thing: the desire to "recover for the week." A trader sees the last chance to fix results. Enters risky trades. Increases lot size. Broker statistics confirm: Friday after 3 PM MSK collects more stop losses than any other time. Ghost Hours There are periods when the market technically works, but better not to trade. From 10 PM to 2 AM MSK, America closed, Asia still sleeping. Liquidity drops. One large order can move price 20 pips. European lunch time (1 PM-2 PM MSK) is also treacherous. Volumes freeze. Price marks time. Then suddenly shoots in any direction without reason. Trading these hours resembles fishing in an empty pond. You can sit long and catch nothing. How Time Affects Your Thinking Fatigue accumulates. In the morning you analyze each trade. By evening you just click on the chart. Biorhythms dictate concentration. Peak performance for most people falls at 10 AM-12 PM. After lunch comes a decline. By 5 PM, risk assessment ability drops 30%. Add caffeine, sleep deprivation, personal problems. Your state changes perception of the same situation on the chart. Wednesday: The Golden Middle Statistics say: Wednesday gives the most stable results. Monday emotions passed. Friday fatigue hasn't arrived yet. Market works in normal mode without surprises. Most professional traders concentrate activity right in the middle of the week. Less noise, more patterns. Find Your Time No universal recipe exists. Some trade Asian session excellently. Others catch New York volatility. Keep a journal not just on trades, but on time. Mark when you make the best decisions. When you make impulsive mistakes. After a month you'll see a pattern. Perhaps your brain works clearer in the evening. Or Mondays really bring only losses. Adapt your schedule to biology, not to the desire to trade 24/7. Time as a Filter Experienced traders use time as an additional entry filter. Good setup on Monday morning? Skip it. Same setup on Wednesday? Take it. Buy signal at 11 PM? Wait for Tokyo opening. No point risking with low liquidity. Time doesn't cancel strategy. But it adds probability in your favor. What the Numbers Say Data from thousands of accounts show clear patterns: Monday: minus 2-3% to average profitability Tuesday-Thursday: stable results Friday: minus 1-2% after 3 PM Night sessions: unprofitable for 78% of traders London-New York overlap: maximum profit for scalpers Numbers don't lie. Psychology is real. Final Word You can have the best strategy in the world. But if you trade at the wrong time, results will be average. The market doesn't change. People trading in it change. Their fatigue, fear, greed, inattention. Time of day and day of week determine who is in the market now and in what state. And this determines how price will move. Choose trading time as carefully as you choose entry point. Many traders add time filters to their strategies or use indicators that help track session activity.