LF, I believe it's your unwillingness to accept the "grind", the "win some/lose some" nature of trading, that has prevented you from consistent profitability over time.
You believe there are traders (or "gurus" perhaps) who can somehow attain something near to perfection. In fact, every consistently profitable trader I've met here wins some and loses some.
Experienced scalpers rarely have losing days, but have plenty of losing trades.
Experienced day traders rarely have losing weeks, but have plenty of losing days.
Experienced RTM faders rarely have losing trades but the occasional losers can be relatively large.
"But you have to understand that thereâs no possible way that these mathematical formulas can predict the outcome of these patterns on a trade by trade basis, only on a series of trades. So when I get a signal from my methodology, at the most fundamental level what this is telling me is that the odds are in my favor that somebody is going to come into the market (this is what the pattern means) and bid it higher than here if I bought or offer it lower than here if I sold. Thatâs all that itâs saying. Now theyâre either gonna come or theyâre not, and so as a result I donât look at this as being a ârightâ or a âwrongâ; I look at this as âHow much distance am I going to give the market to move away from my entry point to tell me that theyâre either going to come or theyâre not, and any further is not worth the cost of finding out.ââ - Mark Douglas (interview)
By definition, if you win some and lose some, you're barely getting by. What Austin described to me sounded more like a desperate attempt to hope something would stick and hoping that by year end his account would be in the green, compared to calmy executing a trading plan and realizing it's edge over time.
At least change it to 'win a lot, lose a little'. Whether that comes from a high win percentage or a lower win percentage where the winners significantly outweigh the losers.
For day trading or trading in general to be worth it, you should be getting a higher return on your capital than you could be getting elsewhere. Risk is also a factor. Just barely getting by does not cut it, at least not for me. If so, I'll rather put my money to work elsewhere.
As for why I wasn't consistently profitable over time, there's probably multiple reasons for that. Maybe I'm not mature enough in my market understanding yet. That's one. But I also think a large factor was that I was in a position that forced me to take more risks and use more leverage than I should have.
Speaking of great traders, there was a trader called Mark Weinstein in the Market Wizards books. In short, he basically claimed that during a certain time period preceding his interview, he never had a losing trade. Prior to that, he had blown his account multiple times.
Is this bullshit? Maybe. Or even probably. Who knows.
The point is that Mark developed a method and had such high criteria for entering a trade that he would never take a sub-par entry/set-up. He used multiple indicators, TA, and ways to view the market and would wait until very indicator, time frame and elliot wave cycle would line up perfectly and tell him the same thing. Only then, would he enter.
So, that's one way to approach it.