yep find the trend.....do not be in a hurry to enter when you do find it.....because the best is saved for the end....the fastest moves occur late in the trend when everyone is sure about the trend.
i used to enter early and then had to sit for a long time because the early part of the trend is the most uncertain, and most times would close before the real trend starts.
also be aware that this will give the worst risk reward but i would not worry too much about that.
i never used tight stops because you can never buy the bottom or sell the top exactly time after time after time so tight stops are senseless.
ALSO BE AWARE THAT THE MARKET DOES NOT TURN ON A DIME...but it takes time to turn around, so just look out for when the market is taking a lot of time to move in one direction so that you will know it will turn and then just sit out till it turns around and forms a well defined trend so that THEN you can enter.
before it forms this well defined trend it will chop around till it finishes off all those traders - both long and short- who are trying to get in early in the trend with tight stops.......
concentrate on the simple stuff....not esoteric theories like demark elliot gann or complicated algorithms
There you go. The answer to scalp trading. Padu has outlined the process I understand so well. the market dangles "carrots" to lure the aggressive (greedy) traders the wrong way (fade) and then they move in towards the real market price. So, first you see as they (the big boys) want you (the retail trader) to see and then the market moves according to actual market mechanics.
I trade from 10;30 - 3:30 est. I find the edges of the day less stable than the terribly unstable day. Also applies to intraday trends.
Effective scalping is about picking a spot in and out, before you enter. So I set a bracket. How many tics do I want and how many tics will I risk. That's and individual choice called risk tolerance. Trade at 1, 2, 0r 3 tics profit and say 3 loss, and see how you do on demo. Does any method produce + results. Even losing in all three scenarios may produce a small thought for investigation.
Padu's post, to me, is the one you needed to hear. It's a path close to mine and others i have seen grown from no profit to some profit. Excluding myself, these guys all have track records of being hard working, smart, successful, and even tempered. Those qualities help everywhere.
most important concept in scalp trading, to me, is padu's claim, "ALSO BE AWARE THAT THE MARKET DOES NOT TURN ON A DIME. I do not beware that priciple, I embrace it. Find me a market that rapidly moving in either direction and I will jump on and jump off ASAP. Sometimes, a single tic in less than a second. recently had a day, 6 for 6, training my sons friend. All single tic trades. the average trade time was 39 seconds for all 6 trades. Longest one was not long, 98 seconds. Cannot lose capital while on the sidelines. being in the S and P, you biggest risk is just being in, subject to high volatility.
So, 3.5 years, 10,000 trades, 10,000 study hours and a no quit attitude has gotten me this far. I am pleased with my progress. Going to try scaling in January. Hard results makes unclear statements so much clearer. Anyone skeptic is challenged to reproduce my results. $58 bucks, Jason's end, 1k in margin, been trading live 8 days only with 2 weeks demo practice. I think he is going to do well. Hope the same for you.