I think I've been spending way too much time listening to noise or trying to find the next trade ideas, and not enough time sitting down and figuring out what I'm doing wrong, what my sticking points are, studying my setups, etc. What have you guys found to be good allocations of time dedicated to journaling, reviewing trades, doing deep dives on setups, finding next trades, watching podcasts, etc?
To that list I would add First and Foremost, do your stats on your setups and triggers in order to verify if all the other activity is even worthwhile. This doesn't apply to artistic intuitive traders.To summarize some good advice here:
1. Get out of the weeds and the noise of intraday charts.
2. Try to narrow your focus to one/two instruments, one strategy.
3. Set ups are on daily charts. Recent highs, lows, opens, closes. Follow up entry
is often what happens the next morning.
4. In my experience, very hard to get a handle on this without a platform for backtesting
and simulation.
5. Don't waste your capital until you've got a good feel for this. It doesn't happen overnight.
Thanks for your advice! I’m sure it will help many new traders start their trading journey on the right track. I don’t know why people look for mentors and coaches when there is so much useful information being shared by so many experienced traders on this forum absolutely free of cost.To summarize some good advice here:
1. Get out of the weeds and the noise of intraday charts.
2. Try to narrow your focus to one/two instruments, one strategy.
3. Set ups are on daily charts. Recent highs, lows, opens, closes. Follow up entry
is often what happens the next morning.
4. In my experience, very hard to get a handle on this without a platform for backtesting
and simulation.
5. Don't waste your capital until you've got a good feel for this. It doesn't happen overnight.