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Just stumbled upon the story of Takashi Kotegawa again, and honestly, it's one of those retail trading legends that never gets old. This guy basically proved that you don't need an MBA or institutional backing to dominate markets—just pure skill and discipline.
Kotegawa started as a self-taught trader in the late 90s, completely self-made. No fancy training, no connections. He just obsessed over price action, chart patterns, and fundamentals until it clicked. Then came 2005, when the Livedoor scandal sent Japan's market into absolute chaos. While everyone else was panicking and losing money, Kotegawa was quietly making a fortune—we're talking over 2 billion yen in profits in just a few years. That's the kind of thing that separates traders from speculators.
But here's what really cemented his legend: the J-Com trade. A Mizuho Securities trader fat-fingered a massive order—tried to sell 610,000 shares at 1 yen instead of selling 1 share at 610,000 yen. It was complete chaos. Most people would've frozen. Takashi Kotegawa saw it instantly and moved like a sniper. He loaded up on the mispriced shares, and when the exchange corrected the error, he banked serious money. That trade showed something most traders never develop: the ability to stay ice-cold when markets are literally breaking.
What I find most interesting is how he lives. Dude made tens of millions and still takes the subway, eats at regular restaurants, barely does interviews. Zero ego, zero need for attention. That's the opposite of what you see on social media these days.
Kotegawa's story hits different because it reminds you that in a world of algorithms and mega-funds, individual skill and timing still matter. He's basically the proof that retail traders can still compete if they're disciplined enough.