How do longer-term (holding time of at least a few days) traders manage their entries? For systems that operate off of daily or weekly bars, the trader must translate an entry signal at the end of the day or week into a specific trading action during the following day. I have yet to find a book that really discusses the pros/cons of different entry tactics within the context of EOD entry signals. I suspect that most backtesting systems (Tradestation, Wealthlab, etc.) presume an enter-at-the-next-open tactic.
Currently, I use limit orders entered after I get an entry signal and before the following market open. On the one hand, well placed "out-of-the-money" limit orders can be great for profiting from reversion by entering near the intraday extreme (i.e., buying at the day's low or shorting at day's the high). On the other hand, OTM limit orders don't always get executed, so they can miss the move.
I am also exploring alternate systems that might use a enter-at-open tactic or a stop order. Personally, I'd like to keep the entry logic simple because one of the advantages to longer-term trading is that I am not glued to the markets during the day. This gives me time to further develop my current system, research new trading systems, or annoy all you ETers with these verbose postings. But it does mean that I have to choose a brainless mechanism for entries (I don't want to be a tape reader because its not where my strengths lie).
In this thread, I'm only wondering about the entries. Exits (which are more important than entries, IMO) are another topic entirely.
Wishing good entries to all,
Traden4Alpha
Currently, I use limit orders entered after I get an entry signal and before the following market open. On the one hand, well placed "out-of-the-money" limit orders can be great for profiting from reversion by entering near the intraday extreme (i.e., buying at the day's low or shorting at day's the high). On the other hand, OTM limit orders don't always get executed, so they can miss the move.
I am also exploring alternate systems that might use a enter-at-open tactic or a stop order. Personally, I'd like to keep the entry logic simple because one of the advantages to longer-term trading is that I am not glued to the markets during the day. This gives me time to further develop my current system, research new trading systems, or annoy all you ETers with these verbose postings. But it does mean that I have to choose a brainless mechanism for entries (I don't want to be a tape reader because its not where my strengths lie).
In this thread, I'm only wondering about the entries. Exits (which are more important than entries, IMO) are another topic entirely.
Wishing good entries to all,
Traden4Alpha
