I often have to remember what Mark Boucher, Hedge Fund manager and contributor to tradingmarkets.com, has to say about short-term trading in his book "The Hedge Fund Edge":
The discussion of short term trading appears as an appendix for a very good reason: I firmly believe that most of the people trading on a short-term basis should not be doing so.
Short-term trading should (1) be reserved for only a very small portion of your overall portfolio; (2) only be used by very experienced investors who are already on top of global market trends; (3) only be used by people who have traded as a full-time business successfully for a number of years; (4) never be used by novice or beginning traders; and (5) be utilized by traders who understand that it may not consistently improve your risk/reward performance.
I have nothing against short-term trading in and of itself. In fact, I made a living trading short-term patterns for several years.
...
On the other hand, for many if not most traders and investors, short-term trading can become almost like a drug that eats up one's time, resources and investment capital. Anyone who has even the remotest inkling of trouble with gambling should stay away as far as possible from short-term trading.
...
Furthermore trader should realize that short-term trading is a grind most of the time. Most strategies require the investor to stay glued to the screen. If you are on a bathroom break and your method signals a trade and you miss it - boom, that could be the best trade of the year.
In addition most short-term strategies have a severe weakness - their risk/reward ratios are very poor compared with longer term strategies. The reason is simple. Short-term periods have less fluctuations to capture, so rewards are rarely 10 or 20 times the initial risk, as can often be the case on a good intermediate-term trade lasting months or even years.
The discussion of short term trading appears as an appendix for a very good reason: I firmly believe that most of the people trading on a short-term basis should not be doing so.
Short-term trading should (1) be reserved for only a very small portion of your overall portfolio; (2) only be used by very experienced investors who are already on top of global market trends; (3) only be used by people who have traded as a full-time business successfully for a number of years; (4) never be used by novice or beginning traders; and (5) be utilized by traders who understand that it may not consistently improve your risk/reward performance.
I have nothing against short-term trading in and of itself. In fact, I made a living trading short-term patterns for several years.
...
On the other hand, for many if not most traders and investors, short-term trading can become almost like a drug that eats up one's time, resources and investment capital. Anyone who has even the remotest inkling of trouble with gambling should stay away as far as possible from short-term trading.
...
Furthermore trader should realize that short-term trading is a grind most of the time. Most strategies require the investor to stay glued to the screen. If you are on a bathroom break and your method signals a trade and you miss it - boom, that could be the best trade of the year.
In addition most short-term strategies have a severe weakness - their risk/reward ratios are very poor compared with longer term strategies. The reason is simple. Short-term periods have less fluctuations to capture, so rewards are rarely 10 or 20 times the initial risk, as can often be the case on a good intermediate-term trade lasting months or even years.
