Quote from jem:
I appreciate your response but my answer will surprise you.
My visceral reaction to putting on bad trades was honed over 7 years of profitable day trading. It protects me and I love it. I embrace my gut. When I hate the trade... I get out. Which really means I hated my undisciplined entry.
(Even if you think a breakout will work... you have to be smart about your entries. )
So when I got pissed at myself for non disciplined entries I got out with minimal loses. Which was great because...
I also nailed a few large swings in a futures markets. So at the end of the day... thursday was nicely profitable and friday was profitable... which is great for a mostly choppy day.
My suggestion to the new trader is to trade stocks doing position trading (PVT}. The one pager that explains PVT trading allows a person to enter late and exit early. So the experience you describe is not in the cards very often. Holding after an entry is a very sensitive and well defined process. The independent variable takes you in and takes you out. You saw a person do his first 62 trades using 27K. In those three months he had two losses and his average ROI was 150K per annum. By the fourth month it had crept up to 250K ROI per year.
So now I will teach you something.
The effort you make below has a few assumptions. I do not do what you assume I do. And I agree with what you say. If a person looks at what I do through your eyes, my trading to make the money I do would not be possible.
So we rarely chat. This is a good opportunity for me to share with you a little. Keep my screen shots of my trading desk in mind. also keep in mine the order in which I peruse the elements of the display.
When you are pretending you are always in and trading the corners.... you are lying. You can't observe the es and get trades on the corners... the premium only gets extended for a few moments... if you are not in the cue... you are not executed at the extended prices.
I'm never in any cue. I thought everyone knew that. I carve turns at their extreme by NOT ever being in the cue.
But the time you observe the opportunity for those prices is gone.
I always use 10 to 12 leading indicators of price. All of them have been explained as you indicate at the bottom of your post to me. Actually you can see most of what I do in a nutshell by printing the nine tables in the "Sweeps chart". the last part of it shows how the OTR chart pairs work.
In the 20 days learning to be an expert, I posts all my lookup tables that can be used in an ATS built using SQL or equivalent. A mong other things there ae the 8 panels of the Modrian table. Each panel has two columns. the left one is the n -1 turn and the right column is the reversal on the n turn. The entries in these columns are ALL End Effects of trends. furthermore, the top four panels are failsafe panels which use "indicators" to assure NOT missing a subfractal move.
Pairs of panels exist for each of the four types of trends. Each trend type is ID'ed byat least the turn BEFORE the reversal turn.
All of this adds up to replacing CW's "prediction" habit.
Always in and get good prices at the corner for reversals is impossible when trading off 5 minute charts like the es.
This is your view. It would certainly be a good idea for us to meet on neutral turf like Genesis in Colorado springs.
there you can see all the back up I created on the trade Navigator system. they have periodic meetings. Perhaps you might want to attend one and hear from all kinds of traders about how systems work.
I invented a term called a WALL. It is a place that price cannot exceed. It is there and it is an extreme of a tend segment. When you "tape read" the DOM and the OTR P/V chat it is like time standing still. I believe you would enjoy seeing how in modern times the "tape is read".
PC's have been around for the minority of time in my trading career. several top notch traders trade out of Vegas. If you like that venue let me know. we ccan be guests of these hotshots and I know they will wlecome showing you the nuances of their ATS's.
Those pages and pages of posts you make after the market closes... are trading comedy. you approach the trendline... look at vvolume determine continuation or reversal and if reveral execute.
FYI I watch leading indicators of price. the approach of price to its limits is a lagging indicator of price. The turn before the approach is what I have logged and classified.
Meanwhile premium has already snapped back and prices are 3 to 4 ticks away in the cue.
That is correct. And before the event of your comment there was a leading indicator signal.
Put up a five minute candle chart of the es for just about any trading day in the U.S.
It does not really matter what time you start the day.
look at all the consolidation periods.
It is generally known from my prints that I am in the market on the correct side of the market within 30 seconds of open. I know most ET folks cannot read my prints. Pekelo proved that to most ET readers of his comments. Usually, as shown on my prints I take a first profit segment in the four digit or low five digit range.
See those wicks...lots of them... lots on each side of the open and close box. If you are making trades after the observation... you get filled in the box not on the wick.
Refer to the TN softwear that triggers on wicks as you say and perhaps do. I trader before this context copmes up in your observations. I do not trade as a consequence of being in a cue of any sort ever. People who carve turns do NOT use the box; they are using the exteremes of wicks.
So if you subtract 2 to 3 ticks from each one of your orders... you papertrading always in methodology turns into big loses.
color=red]I checked that out on my P&L sheets; I get a different result than you do for my trading[/color]
So don't go claiming someone who actually makes money trading has a lizard brain when you post many pages of bullshit about a your post facto daytrading method.
I was commenting on your posts content. Above you can read the offset of your views on my activities compared to what I actually do. So what I read from you seems to have an eternal offset. the stress syndrome and the Lizard Syndrome are commonly used to explain these consistent delayed reaction to market's prior signals. fear anxiety and anger are the source emotions of most of which you describe in your posts.
Which destroys your disciples accounts.
I do review account growth as a consequence of purposeful learning. At the top I commented on a posted record of a beginner in stock trading where he did his first posts. Unfortunately, he gave up his battle with ALS just before noon on Friday. I sat alone today in the trading room he operated for about 8 of his friends. All of us make make money and we come from all walks of life. As I sat there his dog Buddy who lives in the office, got up for a moment as nuzzled my hand. Then he returned to his doggy mattress and closed his eyes again.
you should be ashamed of yourself.