Success in day trading is all about precision and timing. However, when I spot multiple opportunities during live trading, sometimes I get the "deer in the headlights" reaction and by the time I snap out of it the stock has already taken off without me in it.
Besides more screen time and practice, I am looking for ways to improve my reaction time and decisiveness so I don't miss opportunities.
Any suggestions or book recommendations are welcome.
@rin4et
Precision and timing are pieces of YOUR trading system, methods, and techniques. But that is significantly different than your statement. Answer(for yourself) the age old question of which is more important, entry or exit. Topics abound about random entries and trade management too. Point being again, precision and timing are pieces of YOUR trading system, methods, and techniques. It is the DISCIPLINE to follow your signals that will AUTOMATICALLY bring whatever precision and timing are within those signals.
I read somewhere you are a computer programmer(or program architect, engineer, or whatever title you or your industry use). I too, have a like title in my background. You'll get this... 1 + 1 = 2
Some people see it as the whole, a simple mathematical expression. Other folks will see two constants and a sum. A programmer might see it as 2 constants, 1 arithmetic operation, and a statement of equality. (examples are non-exhaustive). For trading, discipline is similar in that it can be broken down into mind function and actual doing.
The late, eccentric, controversial, ET icon, Jack Hershey called the process MADA.
Monitor, Analyze, Decide, Act... All 4 phases are necessary to have a complete structure of discipline. And it is repeated again and again and again, as dictated by your trading system, methods, and techniques.
Armed with this idea, you can determine at which phase you are failing. Most likely you think it's the last phase, Act. But I'll suggest that the fail is in your decision phase. You decide not to act. So the question is why? The answer to that (regarding trading) is somewhere within your monitoring or analysis phase, you are doubting what you are doing or looking at. Perhaps you do not understand why your signal is signaling, aka second guessing. These are just extemporaneous thoughts, I have no idea who you are, how you trade, or anything else about your situation. But I think you get the idea of how to start looking to get to the answer, for you. A yoga session during trading hours is probably not a good use of time.
Maybe something here sparks something that helps you out.
Trade On!