Chasing the last train: how late entries ruin good trendsUS 100 IndexTVC:NDQTonySetupChasing the last train: how late entries ruin good trends The picture is familiar. The asset has already made a strong move, candles line up in one direction, chats are full of profit screenshots. Inside there is only one thought: "I am late". The buy or sell button is pressed not from a plan, but from fear of missing out. This is how a classic "last train" entry is born. This text breaks down how to spot that moment and how to stop turning each impulse into an expensive ticket without a seat. How the last train looks on a chart This situation has clear signs. Long sequence of candles in one direction with no healthy pullback. Acceleration of price and volatility compared to previous swings. Entry happens closer to a local high or low than to any level. Stop is placed "somewhere below" or moved again and again. The mind focuses on other people’s profit, not on the original plan. In that state the trader reacts to what already happened instead of trading a prepared setup. Why chasing the move hurts the account The problem is not just "bad luck". Poor risk-reward. Entry sits near an extreme. Upside or downside left in the move is small, while a normal stop needs wide distance. In response there is a temptation to push the stop further just to stay in. Large players often exit there. For them the trend started earlier. Where retail opens first positions, they scale out or close a part of the move. Strategy statistics get distorted. A system can work well when entries come from levels and follow a plan. Once late emotional trades appear in the mix, the math changes even if the historical chart still looks nice. How to notice that the hand reaches for the last train Knowing your own triggers helps. This symbol was not in the morning watchlist, attention appeared only after a sharp spike. The decision comes from news or chat messages, not from calm chart work. There is no clear invalidation level, the stop sits "somewhere here". Many timeframes blink at once, the view jumps from 1 minute to 15 minutes and back. Inner talk sounds like "everyone is already in, I am the only one outside". If at least two of these points match, the trade is most likely not part of the core system. Simple rules against FOMO Work goes not with the emotion itself, but with the frame around trades. No plan, no trade. A position opens only if the scenario existed before the spike. Fresh "brilliant" ideas during the impulse are placed into the journal, not into the order book. Move distance limit. Decide in advance after what percentage move from a key zone the setup becomes invalid. For example: "if price travels more than 3–4 percent away from the level without a retest, the scenario is cancelled, next entry only after a pause and new base". Trade from zones, not from the middle of the impulse. Plans are built around areas where a decision makes sense, not around the fastest part of a candle. Time filter. After a sharp move, add a small pause. Five to fifteen minutes with no new orders, only observation and notes. What to do when the move has already gone The smart choice is not "grab at least something". Better to: save a screenshot of the move; mark where the trend started to speed up; write down whether this symbol was in the plan and why; prepare a setup for a pullback or the next phase, where entry comes from a level, not from the middle of noise. Then the missed move turns into material for the system instead of three revenge trades in a row. A short checklist before pressing the button Was this symbol in the plan before the run started. Do I see the exact point where the idea breaks and is the stop parked there. Is the loss size acceptable if this trade repeats many times. Can I repeat the same entry one hundred times with the same rules. If any line sounds weak, skipping this "train" often saves both money and nerves. The market will send new ones. The task is not to jump into every car, but to board the ones that match the timetable of the trading plan.