Quote from crazyAtrader:
What now ?
Well you could start by learning that you cannot trust the geometrics of rollovered futures.
Try cash indices for the long term truth.
Crazy A
Quote from JoshDance:
Hey Hurricane: I read some of Phantom yesterday, and have a question for you from what I've read so far. Rule #1 basically says that the trade should be exited if the market does not do what you expect it to do. So for a long, if it starts going against you, then get out.
However, isn't that simply what a stop is for? So often we can enter a trade and the market looks like it may go against us and then it goes in our favor. It almost seems as if he's advocating a time-based stop. In fact I think he mentions that.
What are your thoughts on this? The options for exiting a trade seem to be only 2: a stop based on price, or a stop based on time. What is your interpretation of Phantom?
Quote from JoshDance:
It should also be noted that a long term futures contract may look different to different people, depending on how they roll it over. Some back adjust to handle gaps, some do not. Even different data providers will construct the continuous contract differently, so there is no real "ES chart" that everyone uses. My ES daily chart does not line up the same as bigsnack's, for example.
Cash, on the other hand, should look the same for everyone.