absolutely. Tell us more please.
Mr phoenix has spoilt it for you, apparently he has all the answers
absolutely. Tell us more please.
The reason I'm trading part-time is that I don't want to be involved too much. Trading is a individual endeavor and one has to go through the process to get it. So keep in mind that in all likelihood my input is going to be sparing. I have recently begun to found my own footing and don't know how much energy I have to try to figure things out for other traders. I have my threads where I post already.
You're going ahead with forward testing but have you OBSERVED price for some time without regards to entry/exit signals? Have you observed the difference in price behavior between ES and NQ? It would be better to do that first. How you do things and what you trade is your personal matter. There are many who are profitable traders and trade CL or FX. I am not one of them.
As for NQ or ES, I prefer NQ. One can always use more contracts to increase stake. ES has smaller moves whereas for the same swing NQ has a larger point move. This larger move makes it easier to read the tussle between supply and demand that's the basis for all this SLA method. For learning purposes I just trained on NQ instead of complicating things further. Most illustrations by Db were also in it so I took the easy route.
You seem to understand lines breaks and retracements but it seems you're not in tune with the context. A retracement isn't taking place just about anywhere. Wait for some major S/R or TC top or bottom before you start using the lines for entry. Every wiggle isn't a retracement or a line break. Does CL respect retracements? Just because Db wrote that's how it worked on NQ doesn't mean CL is a vehicle that behaves in a manner conducive for it. In CL retracements might give faulty signals or may take place a few times before price goes in the intended direction. These are the kinds of things you need to keep an eye on if you're to trade CL, or ES, or anything else.
I wish you all the best.
Gringo
Lajax, the market will tell you what you need to know if you listen to it.
I assume you're in the process of characterizing your market. If so, you may be discovering that it's not the right market for you. This is not a tragedy. There are many markets to trade. You just have to find the one that will enable you to reach your goals.
You don't need forward testing to figure the nature of the market out. You can do back testing to see how the market behaved.
While I don't want to discourage you, until you've characterized your market (Appendix E), there's nothing to test, much less trade. You can draw lines and play-trade for years and end up with nothing.
I suggest you begin posting charts along with your observations of what traders are doing without drawing any lines at all. Don't even think about your own entries and exits. Without a trading plan, you have nothing to trade. Without testing, you have no trading plan. Without observation and characterization, there's nothing to test.