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The Art and Business of Professional Trading

List Price: $41.00
SKU:
9781394391745
Quantity:
Minimum Purchase
25 unit(s)
Expected release date is May 4th 2026
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  • Product Details

    Author:
    Ryan Wright
    Format:
    Hardcover
    Pages:
    272
    Publisher:
    Wiley (May 4, 2026)
    Imprint:
    Wiley
    Release Date:
    May 4, 2026
    Language:
    English
    Audience:
    General/trade
    ISBN-13:
    9781394391745
    Weight:
    16oz
    File:
    Wiley-wileyUS_2_incremental_apr21_2026-20260421.xml
    Folder:
    Wiley
    List Price:
    $41.00
    Country of Origin:
    United Kingdom
    Pub Discount:
    50
    As low as:
    $38.95
    Publisher Identifier:
    P-WIL
    Discount Code:
    D
    Dimensions:
    6.3" x 9.1" x 1"
    Case Pack:
    22
  • Overview

    The library of trading literature falls into three largely useless categories. Pop-psychology books focus on mindset and discipline, but psychology is downstream of process. If you lack edge, no amount of mental work saves you. Paint-by-numbers manuals promise certainty through precise setups and mechanical rules, but in an adversarial, reflexive market, widely-known patterns become traps, and the playbook becomes a liability. Academic tomes provide mathematical rigor disconnected from the reality of execution under uncertainty.

    The Art and Business of Professional Trading occupies the void between them. It is what has been missing for the ambitious trader ready to move beyond hobbyist speculation and think with the rigor of an institutional desk.

    Ryan Wright is founder and CEO of a principal trading firm whose traders include veterans of Jane Street, Point72, and DRW. He argues that the amateur's obsession with predicting price direction is a trap. In a market dominated by algorithms and institutional flow, prediction is fragile, but structure is robust. Professional trading is not a game of prophecy. The market is a hostile, negative-sum environment where the primary threat is adverse selection. If you cannot identify the constrained player on the other side of your trade, you are the liquidity they are hunting.

    The book is organized into four parts: Foundations, Mental Models, The Professional's Edge, and The Business of Trading. Wright explains the Operator's Equation for calculating true expectancy after friction, the concept of "forced players" whose constraints create genuine edge, how to decompose your returns to understand what's actually driving them, and regime awareness for recognizing when your strategy's environment has shifted. Vague advice about discipline is replaced with mechanism design: external systems that enforce rational behavior when biology fails.

    The method draws from decision science, behavioral economics, and lessons from high-stakes fields where being wrong has immediate consequences: aviation, military strategy, and engineering. This is not a collection of chart patterns. It is a guide to building a trading business that is robust to uncertainty and resistant to emotional error.

    This book belongs alongside Taleb's Fooled by Randomness, Lebrón's The Laws of Trading, Donnelly's Alpha Trader, and Carver's work on systematic trading. It respects your intelligence enough to tell you the truth: the market is not fair, and survival requires a fundamental reconstruction of how you think, size risk, and interpret reality.