Quote from OldTrader:
Yeah, I held a long position over the Memorial day weekend. I reentered stops on Tuesday. I only have stops in the market during RTH.
Look, what it amounts to is that day traders are not comfortable with overnight risk. I am. My account is large enough, and I am experienced enough, to take on risk. Again though, I am not overleveraged.
So that you know, I've been trading the S&P futures since the day they began. In fact, I traded the Value Line futures before the S&P futures began. I've traded on the floor and off the floor. I've done all the scalping, day trading, etc that anyone could ever want.
I understand that this market is full of daytraders/scalpers. To a man, they are all afraid of holding overnight, and even more afraid of holding over a long weekend. Do you think that creates some type of advantage to anyone who can hold overnight, or can take a bigger risk? I think it does.
OldTrader
Well I am a piker in comparison, so I fail to understand how you manage to control risk/reward by canceling stops for overnight/weekend long trades. If shit happens then would you just hold or accept the larger than expected loss and move on? Surely that would disbalance your risk/reward. Your targets ought to be quite substantial in that case, correct?
