Almost everyone is lying. Because there's no such...

Let's agree to disagree, the only one wiggling around here seems to be you. I made my example clear if you don't like it ignore it and move on.
Well Ok fine.

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Ok let's forget everything and show me a study that proves trading is a profitable system. One i have found is double momentum and the win-rate is somewhere 52%. But again I'm talking about 1:1 RRR. Show me a study that wins more than 50% in long-term which is above 60%??? There are tons of that btw. Deep learning, machine learning and etc. Just show me one!

PS: I love June....

You know that there are people who trade profitably. What you said above just says you haven't found your niche/path/method. For many or most, trading profitably isn't about a "system" that's right most of the time. Some have suggested that you look at which methods are useful under specific conditions, and when they cease to be useful. Since you have worked with so many, perhaps that should be your next area of learning ... which might teach you something about trading ... which is different. As I mentioned in a previous post, I think you would benefit from working at a pace that does not disrupt you as several of your posts indicate. Also most people work better without a financial gun pointed at them. There's a lot to be said for being really good at practicing.

PS: Who's June ?
 
...Show me a study that wins more than 50% in long-term which is above 60%??? There are tons of that btw. Deep learning, machine learning and etc. Just show me one!

PS: I love June....

If you know there are tons out there that are > 60% in the long term...why are you not using one of them ???

Maybe I'm misunderstanding what you wrote but it seems like your complaint is that you're not able to design/automate one for yourself that has a similar like performance as the ones out there that are > 60%.

wrbtrader
 
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The aim is not to try a lot but to try what has potential. You have to search where the solution for the problem can be found. But the problem is that, only after you found it, you know where you have/had to look.
What you did is just the opposite of what you should do: you should think out of the box.

What you did is try what for decades millions have tried before without any result: Systems/indicators that you find for free all over the internet. So in the box.
MACD, RSI, MA, STOCHASTICS, VOLUME, BOLLINGER... have been tested already millions of times, and every day other people do the same. Most without any good result. Instead of testing old things, one should test new things. But most people have no clue what else they still can test.

I know a pharmaceutical company that has a database of any combination if chemicals that has been tested before in that company. If researchers want to do new tests they first have to check if what they want to do was not done before already.

@schweiz, Can you throw bones on some high level out-of-the box ideas that can be tested? One idea I thought about are the opening gaps from overnight sessions- not trading them in a traditional sense as commonly found in the media, but instead defining trend following strategy around it. Any other ideas that you can share?
 
@schweiz, Can you throw bones on some high level out-of-the box ideas that can be tested? One idea I thought about are the opening gaps from overnight sessions- not trading them in a traditional sense as commonly found in the media, but instead defining trend following strategy around it. Any other ideas that you can share?
Your first post.:thumbsup:

Perhaps you should read this:

https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/all-market-gains-since-1993-have-occurred-after-hours.331650/

Have a nice day.
 
it is your businesses that employ Indians and fraud you

the enemy is within in your own country.....

microsoft...60% Indians
Intel 55% indians
cisco 40 %

NASA 65 % iNDIAN

you are the only one that does not employ Indians.....

There's more fraud in the United States than India.

United States @ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Fraud_in_the_United_States

India @ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Fraud_in_India

The above is just a general list. Yet, my brother that's in IT once told me the U.S. has more frauds in IT than any other country in the banking system although I'm not sure where he gets his data from.

His boss of 12 years was fired from the job for faking a college degree from Boston University. The boss was Irish and worked 3 prior IT jobs and highly recommended. :cool:

Most research shows that "bosses" are more likely to commit fraud than those they are managing.

United States and Mexico leads the way for Credit Card fraud @ https://www.forbes.com/sites/halaht...-most-card-fraud-u-s-and-mexico/#6e8aa7564708

By the way, the United States has the largest number of Student Load Debt frauds via U.S. citizens moving abroad to exploit the Foreign Earned Income Tax Exclusion...earning high income in another country but are exempt from paying back their student loans in the U.S. education system...

U.K., New Zealand and the EU are popular destinations for those U.S. citizens cheating their way out of paying back their student loans...legally. Most doing such are disproportionate white (women).

In general, women are more likely to need student loans to go to college than men. Women have larger student loan debts than men.

wrbtrader
 
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Thank you.:-) Seriously, i was hoping you would share something useful. No worries. i'll keep reading your old posts and try learning something from it
 
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