Quote from Thunderdog:
Perhaps I am unduly biased, but breakout methods strike me as a rather expensive way to trade, particularly when it comes to the indexes.
Personally, I think breakout approaches are riskier than certain other approaches, all else being equal. In my limited experience, I have found that breakouts require a lot more risk for a given amount of reward. I don't find that appealing. (In the guts and glory equation, I prefer a lower guts coefficient.)Quote from Spectra:
With more risk comes more reward.
Quote from Thunderdog:
Personally, I think breakout approaches are riskier than certain other approaches, all else being equal. In my limited experience, I have found that breakouts require a lot more risk for a given amount of reward. I don't find that appealing. (In the guts and glory equation, I prefer a lower guts coefficient.)
Quote from Cutten:
Floor traders make money by exploiting the bid-offer spread, being able to front-run institutional order flow, and reacting quicker than off-floor traders. That's it, pretty much, for almost all of them. The majority of floor traders become net losers once they go off the floor.
ACD is basically worthless IMO for any off-floor trader. It's also a cypher for floor traders. Just be on the bid in strong markets, and on the offer in weak ones. Fade sentiment extremes once stops get triggered. Know when a market order is almost done, then fade the order. That's pretty much it.
Quote from Cutten:
Agree 100%.
If someone had a money machine trading method, they would trade it for billions at a hedge fund, not sell it to retail traders at seminars, or spend their time running a clearing firm.
ACD is a marketing tool, pure and simple.
Now I do think that Fischer has some good overall trading advice e.g. know where you are wrong. However, it is misleading for anyone to pretend that simply using the ACD method is going to give them any kind of edge. It's akin to Paul Tudor Jones recommending Elliot Wave.
Quote from amex2:
For those that know Mark F. , he doesn't need any extra pocket change--book and seminar revenue go directly to Make A Wish Foundation. ACD is just as useful for upstairs trading as it is for floor trading, the latter of which is obviously becoming more irrelevant by the day.
I think the ACD method isn't a fail-safe trading 'system'---but the underlying philosophy and disciplines are valuable tools.. As far as Fisher using ACD as a hook to get traders to clear through his firm, for a reasonably-educated trader, having a 'free subscription' to daily ACD is hardly an enticement...the decision to clear is based on execution costs and trading execution tools.
Quote from Thunderdog:
Personally, I think breakout approaches are riskier than certain other approaches, all else being equal. In my limited experience, I have found that breakouts require a lot more risk for a given amount of reward. I don't find that appealing. (In the guts and glory equation, I prefer a lower guts coefficient.)