Originally posted by Don Bright
I hate to say this, but you should spend some time in our school. Think about what you just posted...you tried to buy a stock (GE) at 30.15, but it opened higher at 30.25 (so how could you buy it?). Same on the offer, you offered it at 30.46, much higher than where it opened (30.25). The opening price was in the "trough" between your bid and your offer.
For example purposes, widen this out.
Bid 30. SS at 100.....stock opens at $50, how would you be able to buy or sell with those limits.
Hope this helps!!
Don
An awesome day for bottom picking! I'll continue to work on this and step up my size gradually.Originally posted by lescor
I don't think ROI is all that relevent to daytrading, since most traders think in terms of net return, not percentages. ... My 22 day average has been pretty steady at 1.5 to 2 cents/share. I put in orders for 50-60 stocks per day and my average fill rate is 9%.
Originally posted by dis
I agree that annualized ROI may not be relevant to daytrading. However, in order to evaluate a system`s risk-adjusted return - which is what I am trying to do - one needs to know its average daily ROI.
One its face, the system appears to be quite risky, especially on the long side. I am not particularly impressed by the high win/loss percentage for I could do even better by selling OTM naked puts. Not that I would recommend doing this. The real question is how much risk is involved in generating a unit of return.
dis
