Quote from ChrisMMM:
Put these in order from the easiest time frame to make money to the most difficult.
1 minute bars
5 minute bars
15 minute bars
30 minute bars
daily minute bars

Quote from osorico:
The better question is what is YOUR risk(tolerance).
The shorter the time frame the quicker (and usually more frequent) the result, win or lose, with (hopefully) minimized risk, thereby potentially limited gains.
The longer the time frame, the less frequent the results, win or lose, with quantifiably more risk (usually), thereby more potential for gains.
Nothing, other than risk, prevents a trader from entering based off of a tick chart and exiting based off of a monthly. Or visa-versa. To each their own.
Yet another grope for the grail??
Osorico![]()
Quote from ChrisMMM:
I do appreciate you advice however you could say that risk tolerance is max drawdowns. Max drawdowns are directly related to how profit a system is.
Sure you would think that a 5 minute bar strategy, has a lower max drawdown compared to a daily bar strategy, however if the daily bar strategy is much more profitable vs the 5 minute bar strategy, the max drawdowns will be more on the 5 minute bars.
Hence, you cannot make the relationship of risk tolerance IF there is a relationship between easyness to beat among the time bars.
As to my question...I don't see why it is so hard to answer, I'm quite certain on the answer, however I was hoping to faciliate a group discussion.

Different people use different time frames. Each trader thinks that his chosen principal time frame is the "best" one for his manner of trading, otherwise he would be using another time frame. And, of course, every trader has a plausible reason for his own choice.Quote from ChrisMMM:
Put these in order from the easiest time frame to make money to the most difficult.
1 minute bars
5 minute bars
15 minute bars
30 minute bars
daily minute bars
Quote from osorico:
WRONG!
Max drawdown IS NOT by default, related to the profitability of a system. Do not confuse W/L ratio with profitability.
And your compare of a daily bar strategy vs a 5m bar strategy... WRONG!
When has a 5m bar had a larger range then a daily bar? Answer, NEVER. So how can a 5m strategy have higher drawdown?
YOU can not make the relationship to risk because you assume one timeframe wins consistently and one timeframe loses consistently.
If you don't believe me, ask a scalper. No wait, ask a swing-trader. Oops, my bad, ask a position trader.
Osorico![]()
Quote from ChrisMMM:
...
Also, I don't know why it is so hard to answer the question. I posted the question because I was reading something that said that it is much easier to define the trend long term. Hence I was thinking that it might be easier to trade off the daily bars.
