Actually I've long since passed this level of professionalism, but I do feel tremendous remorse and guilt for the pain I caused my relatives and friends who lost everything supporting my no stops trading style. Grandpa's exact comments to Grandma were, "I told you the boy had no talent for the markets. Now what do we do?" To which Grandma replied, "But he was dong so well." .............................Quote from NoDoji:
I'm under the impression (correct me if I'm wrong) that you, on the other hand, are still in the early learning phases of mastering this level of professionalism.
...........................(This is a joke
)Actually, as I mentioned, I wouldn't have actually averaged down with a real trade. And on further reflection on the original 87.41 reentry after the +30 tick profit to 87.44, I may have taken a small 5 tick or so profit or even exited b/e as it seemed to stall out there before the Fed announcement, which as I mentioned I would have been flat preceding it. But I would have reentered after that at 87.21 and exited at 87.70 as I announced quite a while before the actual exit. And the stop for the 87.21 entry was 87 as I mentioned. If it pulled back that far I'd take that loss and reassess the action. I may have reentered around there if it seemed to stabilize with a quick trigger finger exit if it started to decline again. Maybe a 10 tick stop.Quote from NoDoji:
Don't misconstrue my criticism here, but you're being very evasive. You're assuming that because oil was in a strong uptrend, the pullback was going to be all nice and "resistance becomes support at the rising 20-period exponential moving average while Mr. Bollinger dances the contango through the shadow of the valley of MACD" perfect, and run right on up to your profit target without a glitch.
My question is, if you averaged down and price suddenly started falling out of nowhere, crashing through one support level after another for no apparent reason, where was your stop?![]()
Quote from NoDoji:
For a cautionary note on being "in and out while this trade was on" and having no stop in place, I offer you a quote from this very thread back in early 2010, which I had begun following regularly while I was still sim trading CL:
Quote from mgmaggie:
"I know, when I went to the bathroom I was only a few hundred in the red. I just didn't believe that CL would move that fast and that much. Now I am over five thousand."
That's a great quote. Poor baby. Trading lessons can be rough.
I wouldn't actually go off to do something else without a stop in place if I had a real money trade on. I would never, ever do that. And don't you do that either you lurkers.
I've been at this a long time cumulatively now. The reason I'm sim trading is I've been waiting for my account to get funded. I spent 2 hours on the phone this morning with my bank clearing up a matter that was preventing my wire from going out. But I will only trade one CL contract at a time until I learn these contracts better, or possibly 2 QM's.