I know exactly what you mean. I'm really focused on getting on the right side of a trade and then with a stop just let it go and give it room to move. This is something I do occasionally but not enough. Bigger money comes with longer holds.Quote from Visaria:
You know, there is something to be said about about just putting on a position, with stops and limit orders and not looking at it and doing something else.
(i don't know what exactly, but there is definitely something to be said!)
Quote from BCE:
I know exactly what you mean. I'm really focused on getting on the right side of a trade and then with a stop just let it go and give it room to move. This is something I do occasionally but not enough. Bigger money comes with longer holds.
Quote from BCE:
Also, and to me this is important, Larry Williams once said at a seminar I attended, that the high or low of the day frequently occurs in the first hour. I thought that was a great observation. t. [/B]
Tight stops if it's testing lows or highs maybe. And I did use one when I tried the short @96. I had a 5 tick stop loss but saw immediately it wasn't going to go so just checked out with a 3 tick loss. What I didn't do though was flip it. It's earlier here when I start trading and sometimes I've just gotten up so I'm not fully focused. I wanted to do what I'm saying but just didn't. It was a perfect setup and I knew what to do, but didn't. Lesson remembered.Quote from Visaria:
Tight stops or wide?
Is that observation valid for all markets or just the stock market though?