Good idea -- rephrase the problem. Rephrasing a problem is a good tool for thinking outside the box. How about this: "Is my system dependent on perfect entries and exits, and thus requires secrecy? If somebody else knows my system, does that person knowing my secret invalidate my logic?" People are afraid that others will dampen their liquidity at prime areas. That assumes that it's only that one system that will have entries or exits there, which is not realistic. Every time I make a trade, I can be relatively sure that somewhere in the world, an EMA pair has just crossed and triggered a trade, a MACD crossover has just triggered a system, or the moon just passed the house of Aquarius, triggering a trade. But strangely, I'm not worried about it. I use the 21-period EMA, should I be worried about the guy using the 20-period EMA front-running me? What percentage of the day's volume are you trading, anyway?Quote from jbt:
Perhaps we are simply misunderstanding the thread. If you rephrase it by saying - will going public with your trade set-ups ruin them?
Quote from Martini:
I just read a review for a book on Amazon and a reviewer wrote:
I've heard this several times before; is it true? It seems to me that contradicts something else I've frequently read, that being on the winning side of a trade is about being on the side of the bigger crowd. If more people were using your system, wouldn't you be making more money?
Quote from Thunderdog:
Thank you again.
Quote from Random.Capital:
You're welcome.
(Admittedly, it's better to know what we're disagreeing about.
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