Josh-
I'll throw in my 2 cents. While I haven't been day trading very long, I've been in the business over 25 years as a broker. Day trading is a completely different animal. It sounds like you have done some good things already by coming up with a strategy, and testing it in a sim environment. Keep in mind (as you have heard before) that real money on the line makes trading a whole different deal from sim. You have gotten some solid advice from J Smith and EPrado. It is good to be teachable.
While strategy is important, the psychological aspect of trading is far more important in my opinion. I think there have been studies done that show even random entries can be profitable with proper money management. Money management has everything to do with psychology. Can you cut your losses? Can you ride your winners? It's all a mind game.
Prado gives some really solid advice. If you make it, it will take much longer than you think. I would say multiple the time you think it will take by 2 or 3. I'm not even kidding. If you think you can make a living in 6 months, plan on a year or 18 months. If you aren't discouraged by then, you stand a decent chance. Save your money and keep a job for as long as you can while you learn to be profitable.
Lastly, I would say stay positive. There may be days, where every trade turns to shit. But people are doing this for a living. It can be done, and you ask the right question. Why not me?
Solid advice Ken. I am also in the camp of the psychological part of trading is more important than the strategy. Whenever I go through draw downs (they happen to everyone) it's not the strategy, it's me over thinking things, not taking trades. My strategy is very systematic. The set up is there, you pull the trigger, EVERY TIME. There is no room for thinking "Do I do the trade or not ?"
In the past what has gotten me in trouble is after a few losing trades in a row is to start over thinking and coming up for excuses for not doing the trade. Then I pass on a set up. The trade would have been a lay up. To me losing trades are really no big deal, part of the game. But to pass on a winning trade you knew you should do is absolutely horrific. So now instead of making a good chunk of the draw down back I'm in the same place P/L wise. To me that is BAD trading.
This happens less over time the more you trade. One thing I do now is once I'm done for the day that's it. Forget whether it was a good or bad day and move on. When I come into the next session I forgot what happened yesterday. In my opinion you have to....trading really is a giant mindf*ck at times. If you can get through that, to me the trading part is easy if you have a solid well defined strategy.
ops: -- I like to refer to the market as She, kind of like referring to the ocean.
