Agree to some extend. I think that if Spike came to me and offered me his system "for free", I wouldn't trade it. So I can understand why is it that not everybody wants to trade with "longer" term horizons.
It comes down to our personality. There is no right or wrong as long as we become successful.
Still I take my hat off to guys that can make a living trading intraday because I can't do it. As b1s2 has pointed out I also believe it is much easier to make money trading out of noise than inside of it, intraday trading is brutal imho.
I personally trade very little. 95 to 97% percent of my time is spent doing research and studying the markets. I work all day at this, everyday.
(As part of my research I have started reading this thread from the very beginning, on page 167 now)
It comes down to our personality. There is no right or wrong as long as we become successful.
Still I take my hat off to guys that can make a living trading intraday because I can't do it. As b1s2 has pointed out I also believe it is much easier to make money trading out of noise than inside of it, intraday trading is brutal imho.
I personally trade very little. 95 to 97% percent of my time is spent doing research and studying the markets. I work all day at this, everyday.
(As part of my research I have started reading this thread from the very beginning, on page 167 now)
Quote from Buy1Sell2:
My comment is that with markets like corn or mini beans, a trader can get in and trade for the long term. You could use profit targets there as well. The more exciting markets, it may take a bit more money, but I would rather have the grubstake and trade for position especially for a newer trader. That's the issue with the markets--the newbie goes to daytrading before they should be trading at all. It just gives the rest of us liquid places to get in and get out.