Quote from rdg:
Overcoming spread and commission is an enormous chore regardless of time frame.
Not really in long timeframes.
How badly are you trading that $14 is the cutoff between profitability and unprofitability?
Are you trading super small lot sizes or something? Or are your target profits microscopic?
Even if you only had $1,000 to invest in SPY (round it up to $130 per share), you could buy 7 shares ($910) plus commission ($7) for $917.
This means you'd have to sell at $132 just to break even. You'd sell for a net of $924 minus the comission ($7) and you'd be at $917, which is what it cost you to buy.
If you're swing or long term trading for a 1.5% gain ($2 on $130) then you need to reassess your trading plan.
I personally say that $1,000 is a bit small of an amount to be trading with, so let's say you have $5,000 instead.
You can now buy 38 shares for $4,940 + commission which is $4947. Now price has to go up about 38 cents per share in order for you to break even, at which point you would sell for $4954.44, minus commission, which puts you at $4947.44.
If you're swing or long term trading for 0.2% gain (38 cents on $130) then you need to reassess your trading plan.
If you're one of the ET millionaires who has figured out the secrets to make MACD (or any of the other indicators) profitable, then you probably have much more. Let's say you can buy a $20,000 position of SPY.
Now you have 153 shares. You now need a $0.09 gain in SPY in order to break even after commissions. That's 0.06%.
If your target profits on a long term swing trade are a 0.06% increase in stock price, then your trading plan needs to be revised.
Just saying.
Of course, ET millionaires who can use MACD profitably obviously know exactly when to exit a trade (since MACD tells them) so this entire post doesn't even apply to them.