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Lessons · 2026-06-10 · 5 min read

From Mom's $200K to $1M Then Almost Zero — What Clement Ang Learned From It

Track. Study. Wait. Strike.
English อ่านภาษาไทย (Thai)

Source: TraderLion "How Clement Ang Achieved 150%+ Returns in the US Investing Championship" (2026-01-17)


Clement Ang was a university student in Singapore when his mother gave him $200,000. He turned it into $1 million riding the COVID bull market.

Then he nearly lost everything.

In 2025, he came back to win the US Investing Championship's million-dollar money manager division with a 150%+ return.

His story isn't about talent. It's about someone who fell hard and learned the right things.


Lesson 1: The Right Priority Order — Preservation First

Clement read Trader Vic and found the framework that changed his approach:

"In trading you always want to conduct your business in the following order: first — preservation of capital; second — consistent profitability; third — pursuit of superior returns."

Most traders start at #3 — chasing home runs before learning how to protect their capital.

Clement made that exact mistake. With $1 million, he thought he was "the next Market Wizard." No system for protection. The result: lost almost everything.

This order cannot be skipped. You have to learn to lose small before you can earn big.


Lesson 2: Stage 4 = Never Buy. No Exceptions.

His first stock was HSBC Holdings — a tip from his mother. The stock was below its long-term moving average, making lower highs continuously. That's Stage 4. Then BABA, breaking down from Stage 3 to Stage 4. He averaged down until he couldn't take it anymore and sold.

His own conclusion:

"I broke a rule — I bought a stock trading below the 200-day. That was a pretty humbling moment."

Stage 4 = off the watchlist. Doesn't matter how far it's fallen. Doesn't matter how good the news sounds. Price below a declining 200d MA = no.


Lesson 3: Don't Fight the Market's Direction

During the 2022 US bear market, Clement learned short selling and did well in Q4. When the market bottomed in October 2022, he didn't recognize it — he thought every bounce was a dead cat.

He shorted Tesla through its entire recovery, got stopped repeatedly, doubled up each time, got stopped again. He lost 60-70% of what he had left.

"I was draining myself mentally and emotionally. I began to trade very emotionally."

The lesson: when the market repeatedly stops you out on the same side, that is information — not a signal to double down. It's a signal to stop.


Lesson 4: Build a Model Book Before Trading

After his break, the first thing Clement did was follow Qullamaggie's advice:

"I began making my own model book — tracking all these stocks that had moved big, consolidated, made a big move again. Making my own annotations."

A model book is a visual library of what winning stocks look like before they break out. It's not a backtest tool. It trains the pattern-recognition part of trading that no indicator can replace.


Lesson 5: Write Down Your Trading Rules

After the major drawdown, Clement sat down and wrote a document specifying:

"Trading is as much mental as it is technical. I very rarely see questions on the mental side — how do you handle drawdowns psychologically?"

Written rules don't help you find better setups. They stop you from doing the things you already know you shouldn't do.


The Comeback: Why 2025 Produced 150%+

After rebuilding his system, he traded 2023's bull market carefully. Then he joined the 2024 US Investing Championship to "test himself" and create public accountability. In 2025, with a solid process, he achieved 150%+ in the million-dollar division.


What This Means for Thai Traders

Clement Ang's story is one many Thai traders can relate to:

The three-priority order from Trader Vic matches everything we validated in 36 years of Thai stock data:

1. Preservation = stop at the higher low, kill switch, 0.5% risk per trade 2. Consistent profitability = trade only tested setups, market regime gate 3. Superior returns = hold winners long, partial exits

This order isn't theory. It's a survival protocol.


What Our Data Shows

Stage 4 avoidance (lesson 2): We compared 737 backtest trades without the 200-day MA filter against 622 trades with it. Results across 2007–2026 Thai data:

MetricWithout 200d filterWith 200d filter
Win rate48.2%49.2%
Mean return per trade+9.81%+10.81%
Average winning trade+26.89%+28.28%

The 200-day filter doesn't just cut losing trades — it selects for larger winners. Exactly what Clement learned the hard way.

Don't fight the market (lesson 3): After a bearish 10w/20w EMA weekly crossover on the SET index, expected 60-day forward returns dropped from +1.41% (baseline) to essentially zero. Repeatedly getting stopped out on the same side is the market telling you the regime has shifted — not an invitation to double down.


This article summarizes lessons from a public interview for educational purposes only — not investment advice. Every setup carries risk. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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