I agree with you Lindq
What I would like to do is switch gears for a moment and offer something that sort of illustrates the problem for retail traders.
While I am fiddling around here, watching news and monitoring my position, I notice that price (I trade the ES contract) reached a swing high of approx 1338, then a swing low of 1331.25.
When it did that I took notice. That swing low is an important price point. I know that because I have been watching this contract trade for a number of years, and I have a framework from which to make observations both long term and short (in this case short)...So I watched the 13:20 EST bar trade and when I tranistioned into the 13:25 bar, I got long at 1335.25 with a 1.5 stoploss. I knew from experience that this could go either way but if it was going up it would do so I would take very little heat and the target would be at least 10 pts (my opinion). Now we are looking at 1340.25 or so and I haven't got my 10 yet, but for me this is just another walk in the park. Not much emotion or anxiety. I am trading it pretty mechanical, scaling out every couple of points or so...
In the same room with me, I have a young guy who is visiting and he is watching over my shoulder. He is also trying to trade from his laptop and he got long at the same time I did. He's very inexperienced.
He got long at 1332.25 and got flushed out at 1333.75 (he got anxious when it retraced so he wussed out)...I told him to enter long on the next bar. he did...Long again at 34.25 (lost some edge and paid the extra commish) he watched while it moved up to the pivot and he got washed out there as well. No prob, but he is out at 1336...and very satisfied with his "great trade"
I am still long from 1332.50 and we are at 1343.
The difference between retail and professional in dollars and cents is
retail...Trade 1....1.5 pts.......Trade 2.....1.75 pts
Professional...Trade 1......we're at 1346 now and I am scaling out, have just a couple of runners left.....nearly 15 es points
What I want to say about this is not "hey what a great guy, what great trade....uh uh...what I am saying is the retail trader is a weak hand...he hasn't got the experience, hasn't developed the judgement and as a result, he can't beat expenses (commish, losses due to noise, etc), and that is exactly why he is here trying to figure it out watching me trade....
This is simple human nature and it ain't gonna change
Good luck
Steve
Edit;
Check the time stamp for reference as I am still in this trade.
Edit at 2:06 EST
If we get back to 1342 or so I will be flat, otherwise I am looking for a test of the previous high at 1353.
Retail is out and "just watching"...
Edit at 2:13 EST
We retraced back to 1342.75 and "retail boy" is asking "why did you give back so much of your profit?"
Edit at 2:15
I am flat at 1342. Anybody know the answer to his question?
What I would like to do is switch gears for a moment and offer something that sort of illustrates the problem for retail traders.
While I am fiddling around here, watching news and monitoring my position, I notice that price (I trade the ES contract) reached a swing high of approx 1338, then a swing low of 1331.25.
When it did that I took notice. That swing low is an important price point. I know that because I have been watching this contract trade for a number of years, and I have a framework from which to make observations both long term and short (in this case short)...So I watched the 13:20 EST bar trade and when I tranistioned into the 13:25 bar, I got long at 1335.25 with a 1.5 stoploss. I knew from experience that this could go either way but if it was going up it would do so I would take very little heat and the target would be at least 10 pts (my opinion). Now we are looking at 1340.25 or so and I haven't got my 10 yet, but for me this is just another walk in the park. Not much emotion or anxiety. I am trading it pretty mechanical, scaling out every couple of points or so...
In the same room with me, I have a young guy who is visiting and he is watching over my shoulder. He is also trying to trade from his laptop and he got long at the same time I did. He's very inexperienced.
He got long at 1332.25 and got flushed out at 1333.75 (he got anxious when it retraced so he wussed out)...I told him to enter long on the next bar. he did...Long again at 34.25 (lost some edge and paid the extra commish) he watched while it moved up to the pivot and he got washed out there as well. No prob, but he is out at 1336...and very satisfied with his "great trade"
I am still long from 1332.50 and we are at 1343.
The difference between retail and professional in dollars and cents is
retail...Trade 1....1.5 pts.......Trade 2.....1.75 pts
Professional...Trade 1......we're at 1346 now and I am scaling out, have just a couple of runners left.....nearly 15 es points
What I want to say about this is not "hey what a great guy, what great trade....uh uh...what I am saying is the retail trader is a weak hand...he hasn't got the experience, hasn't developed the judgement and as a result, he can't beat expenses (commish, losses due to noise, etc), and that is exactly why he is here trying to figure it out watching me trade....
This is simple human nature and it ain't gonna change
Good luck
Steve
Edit;
Check the time stamp for reference as I am still in this trade.
Edit at 2:06 EST
If we get back to 1342 or so I will be flat, otherwise I am looking for a test of the previous high at 1353.
Retail is out and "just watching"...

Edit at 2:13 EST
We retraced back to 1342.75 and "retail boy" is asking "why did you give back so much of your profit?"
Edit at 2:15
I am flat at 1342. Anybody know the answer to his question?