If, as Cheese said, you're looking for intraday volatility, along with being a slightly forgiving market, your best bet would be to go the YM route.
NQ will also give you good moves.
The e-mini russell ERU on my data feed, also known as ER2 will give you a lot of what you call one-way trendiness, but if you are not carefull it can also chop your account to pieces pretty quickly.
I don't have much experience with the foreign indices, however based on what Red Duke has said in this post and the past, their performance will pretty much mirror their US counterpart(s).
The energy markets (QM specifically) will also trend pretty well, but you'll have to develop good methodologies to trade them by.
While Bitstream is in essence correct about the S&P/ES indices, if you pull up the financial charts (ES/NQ/YM) and observe them on an intra-day basis for a period of a month you will see that for all intents and purposes they pretty much trend/trade in lock-step with each other. ERU does not necessarily display this attribute.
Best,
Jimmy
NQ will also give you good moves.
The e-mini russell ERU on my data feed, also known as ER2 will give you a lot of what you call one-way trendiness, but if you are not carefull it can also chop your account to pieces pretty quickly.
I don't have much experience with the foreign indices, however based on what Red Duke has said in this post and the past, their performance will pretty much mirror their US counterpart(s).
The energy markets (QM specifically) will also trend pretty well, but you'll have to develop good methodologies to trade them by.
While Bitstream is in essence correct about the S&P/ES indices, if you pull up the financial charts (ES/NQ/YM) and observe them on an intra-day basis for a period of a month you will see that for all intents and purposes they pretty much trend/trade in lock-step with each other. ERU does not necessarily display this attribute.
Best,
Jimmy


