After the 1st leg up do you sell or hold?

I like to evaluate each trade at the time you are looking to exit. If you had no position, would you put one on at that point? If the response is no, I would exit. If the answer is yes, I would consider adding. If you don't want to add because of risk or lack of excess margin, just hold or place a trailing stop.
Isn't this method not very objective/rule based?
 
It's called Marginal Analysis --
marginal revenue
marginal production
marginal utility
It's ruled neoclassical microeconomics for the last 150 years.
see, for example, Marshall; Jevons; Ely; Samuelson; Friedman; et. al.
Yes professor. But how do I calculate marginal revenue, production and utility for my trade so I can decide to fish or cut bait?

Thank you in advance.
 
I am having a dilemma on what to do after the 1st leg up. Do I sell or do I hold?
I used to sell and the stock would go up a 2nd leg and I would kick myself for not staying in the trade. After all don't they say "let your winners run".
So today I decided to do the reverse and hold after the 1st leg up. Instead it turned out there was no 2nd leg and the stock ended up drifting lower and I gave back part of my profits.
Please don't suggest scaling out, my position size is already quite small.
I am thinking the best solution would be to sell after the 1st leg up and then wait for confirmation of a 2nd move higher before jumping in.
Would love to hear from other day traders on how they handle this dilemma.


I am not a day-trader so I'm not able to guarantee this method intra-day but see what you think. It is aimed at exploiting trends to the maximum potential. It sacrifices unrealised early profit in favour of potential excess later gains while not entailing any additional capital risk.

Firstly, be aware this is a trend-following tactic. Once I have entered e.g. long in an uptrend I set a new buy order at the same distance above entry as the initial stop is below it, let's call that distance r (r for risk). The initial SL is TA-based. When the second trade is triggered, I move the SL on Trade 1 to b/e, Trade 2's SL is Trade 1's entry. Hopefully the uptrend continues and a series of new trades are triggered. When each new trade is opened, I set a new buy order r points above the last entry and move all SL's r points higher. So capital risk never increases beyond r.

After the initial trade plus 3 pyramid trades, you enter territory where your returns if all SL's are hit exceed those on a single trade bought and held, and these returns increase parabolically with each trade added.

Food for thought I hope.
 
I am having a dilemma on what to do after the 1st leg up. Do I sell or do I hold?
I used to sell and the stock would go up a 2nd leg and I would kick myself for not staying in the trade. After all don't they say "let your winners run".
So today I decided to do the reverse and hold after the 1st leg up. Instead it turned out there was no 2nd leg and the stock ended up drifting lower and I gave back part of my profits.
Please don't suggest scaling out, my position size is already quite small...

I had the same dilemma this week in futures. My saving grace was that it was position trading (buy and hold). With daytrading methods I would have been out and at a loss.

This is a very complicated issue that involves way too many variables, at least on the futures side, unless you can give us more exact information as to what you are doing. You seem to be doing this with pure stocks, not stock-futures with expiry? Without the expiry issue, you have a whole other world of trading in front of you.

I can tell you one thing...There is a world of hurt involved with the idea of "kicking myself for not staying in the trade." I could have at least doubled my profits had I stayed in my trades today. But you HAVE to see the flip side of this, which is..."If I had not gotten out of my trade when I did, and it reversed, I would be in a world of hurt. WHY DID I NOT GET OUT WHEN I DID?!?"

Whichever hurts less is what will work for you. I choose the conservative method. So what that the position took off way past my exit? At least I am out, made money, and have no more risk exposure in the market. It is tough to swallow the humility, but it puts hair on the chest. Even if you are a woman. Just ask Xela. (j/k Xela haha).
 
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I am not a day-trader so I'm not able to guarantee this method intra-day but see what you think. It is aimed at exploiting trends to the maximum potential. It sacrifices unrealised early profit in favour of potential excess later gains while not entailing any additional capital risk.

Firstly, be aware this is a trend-following tactic. Once I have entered e.g. long in an uptrend I set a new buy order at the same distance above entry as the initial stop is below it, let's call that distance r (r for risk). The initial SL is TA-based. When the second trade is triggered, I move the SL on Trade 1 to b/e, Trade 2's SL is Trade 1's entry. Hopefully the uptrend continues and a series of new trades are triggered. When each new trade is opened, I set a new buy order r points above the last entry and move all SL's r points higher. So capital risk never increases beyond r.

After the initial trade plus 3 pyramid trades, you enter territory where your returns if all SL's are hit exceed those on a single trade bought and held, and these returns increase parabolically with each trade added.

Food for thought I hope.
Isn't this similar to trailing stops?
 
I just place a little note in my brain of where I'm happy selling, today it was a trade for two minutes and $37, yesterday it was a little over an hour and just over $600. I think only you can decide and knowing when is just a educated guess based on what the stock appears to be doing.
 
Yes professor. But how do I calculate marginal revenue, production and utility for my trade so I can decide to fish or cut bait?

Thank you in advance.

When you calculate reward-to-risk for a trade, you are doing marginal analysis.
When you calculate reward/day-to-risk, you are doing even better.

Google Al Sherbin on the tastytrade videos FMI, and wish like hell he still had that bully pulpit.
 
When you calculate reward-to-risk for a trade, you are doing marginal analysis.
When you calculate reward/day-to-risk, you are doing even better.

Google Al Sherbin on the tastytrade videos FMI, and wish like hell he still had that bully pulpit.
Thank you sir.
 
Isn't this similar to trailing stops?

Yep, that smells like a trailing stop to me. A classic pattern I have tried. It works very well in a strong trend.

The idea is to go in with one extra contract over the original. When target is hit, the second contract gets the BE stop, but the hope is that the second contract goes further. But in a mixed-mode market? It kind of sux due to the retrace stops. Mreh.
 
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