It seems to me your view of noise is really Maximum Adverse Excursion. I suggested in a previous thread that analyze your MAE. If the market consistently moves a large amount against your entry point, that is not noise, that is poor entry. One way to deal with that problem is to wait for a retracement after your entry signal before entering your trade.
>>My point is, the only way to actually make profit and not get stopped out when using a tight 2-3 tick stop, as recommended, is to pick the absolute bottom or top.<<
You don't need 100% accuracy to profit, you just need an edge. "Absolute tops and bottoms" occur at S/R levels most of the time. For a 2-3 tick stop to work, you need a very accurate trading method. A more realistic stop for scalping is 4-6 ticks.
Trading is not easy, scalping is not easy.
When you do a postmortem on your trades, what do you discover? Why are you not profitable? Are there too many losers? Are losses too large? Are there any noticeable patterns e.g., do your losers tend to occur at particular times of day or at the same place in the price wave structure.
After the analysis, what changes have you made to correct the problems?
Bill
>>My point is, the only way to actually make profit and not get stopped out when using a tight 2-3 tick stop, as recommended, is to pick the absolute bottom or top.<<
You don't need 100% accuracy to profit, you just need an edge. "Absolute tops and bottoms" occur at S/R levels most of the time. For a 2-3 tick stop to work, you need a very accurate trading method. A more realistic stop for scalping is 4-6 ticks.
Trading is not easy, scalping is not easy.
When you do a postmortem on your trades, what do you discover? Why are you not profitable? Are there too many losers? Are losses too large? Are there any noticeable patterns e.g., do your losers tend to occur at particular times of day or at the same place in the price wave structure.
After the analysis, what changes have you made to correct the problems?
Bill