Consistently Profitable Day Traders

I dont understand why people always ask how much can you make or how many of you make money and how many lose. It doesn't make any difference what others do. Either you can do something or you cant. Quit worrying about others and try to do something you can do. I have done many things others have told me I could never do. Who cares what others do??????? If you have no confidence in yourself you will never be successful at anything.
 
Quote from tradin4profits:

I dont understand why people always ask how much can you make or how many of you make money and how many lose. It doesn't make any difference what others do. Either you can do something or you cant. Quit worrying about others and try to do something you can do. I have done many things others have told me I could never do. Who cares what others do??????? If you have no confidence in yourself you will never be successful at anything.

I absolutely agree. Systematics solves. I think the trade and not be at a loss is a good thing. Have a lot to consider and to know and then the profits will not take long. I believe in pololozhitelnye days. Since I had such quite often.
 
Quote from tradin4profits:

Either you can do something or you cant.

Quit worrying about others and try to do something you can do.

I have done many things others have told me I could never do.

If you have no confidence in yourself, you will never be successful at anything.

congrats.

you have arrived.

trade on.

s

:cool:
 
Quote from EricP:

I don't like to trade low volume stocks (anything under 150-250k shares per day).

My total open exposure varies quite a bit during the day, and also based upon how active the market might be (obviously, the higher the VIX the better). In recent months, I might max out with total combined share size of 60k to 100k shares during the peak exposure of the day. Back in 2008, I would max out at levels of 500k to 1M total shares.

Your post caught my attention because I trade futures and I trade less number of contracts in times of high volatility to get same risk per trade. However, your peak exposure in shares during 2008 was 5-10 times the peak exposure in 2012. VIX(2008) was 3-5 times VIX(2012). So, if you are sizing your positions by volatility, for every 300-500 shares a clip in 2012, you would trade 100 shares a clip in 2008. Correct?

So, to attain a peak share exposure of 5 to 10 times in 2008 Vs 2012, you would be trading (5 to 10) multiplied by (3 to 5) = (15 to 50) times number of trades in 2008 Vs 2012. That means a 3 to 5 times higher VIX in 2008 led to 15 to 50 times more number of open signals/trades in 2008 compared to what you get in 2012 at the peak exposure time during the day.

Do my numbers make sense? If not, please feel free to correct me. I started trading after 2008 and so have no experience of trading in those extreme conditions. I want to prepare myself though, in case such extreme market conditions return in future. So, I am very interested in learning from your experience. Appreciate your thoughts.
 
Two thumbs up for anyone consistently making 6 figures in the past few years. I've been at it for more than a decade and nearly everyone I started out with is doing something else. Good thing I diversified when my returns were good, else in the current job market I'd probably be flipping burgers to provide for my family.
 
Quote from gmst:

Your post caught my attention because I trade futures and I trade less number of contracts in times of high volatility to get same risk per trade. However, your peak exposure in shares during 2008 was 5-10 times the peak exposure in 2012. VIX(2008) was 3-5 times VIX(2012). So, if you are sizing your positions by volatility, for every 300-500 shares a clip in 2012, you would trade 100 shares a clip in 2008. Correct?

So, to attain a peak share exposure of 5 to 10 times in 2008 Vs 2012, you would be trading (5 to 10) multiplied by (3 to 5) = (15 to 50) times number of trades in 2008 Vs 2012. That means a 3 to 5 times higher VIX in 2008 led to 15 to 50 times more number of open signals/trades in 2008 compared to what you get in 2012 at the peak exposure time during the day.

Do my numbers make sense? If not, please feel free to correct me. I started trading after 2008 and so have no experience of trading in those extreme conditions. I want to prepare myself though, in case such extreme market conditions return in future. So, I am very interested in learning from your experience. Appreciate your thoughts.

I don't size my positions by volatility. First and foremost, I only trade a system during a 'profitable environment' for each system. This is well correlated by volatility, and as a result many systems decay into poor performance during low volatility times (and thus are deactivated for live trading).

For systems that do trade, I will limit trade size based upon many factors, including the average daily volume of a stock (for low volume stocks, my max position size will be restrained to ensure that I maintain the ability to enter and exit positions without adversely moving the position against myself).

During 2008, volatility was wild and any system under the sun was incredibly profitable and average daily volumes were through the roof. As a result, the only limitation was due to buying power, and even buying power was growing rapidly over time due to accumulated profits. Sadly, this year, the volatility and volume both suck and so my trading volumes are sharply lower than my historical averages. (I've still be profitable in 14 of the last 15 months, but total profits are insignificant relative to the wild years of the financial panic)
 
Why don't you stop by and see me some time...spend a few days...and judge for yourself if I am or am not consistently profitable. I am in San Diego.

Mike

Come back Mike so I can go visit you in San Diego. I will treat you out to phils, oscars, tacos el gordo, or anything else that's to your taste just so I can meet another person who actually trades.
 
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