I have this equities system i run, its all based on weekly closing prices. I look forward to the end of every week like you wouldn't believe in the hopes that a new signal will be produced. And i relish the opportunity to open those positions on Monday morning. Of course, I only get 5 or 10 of these per year, so there is a lot of waiting.
But i have this futures swing trading system, based on daily prices, that I am having a harder time with. I should relish each of these signals as much as i do those in the equities system, and the fact that I don't clearly just shows a lack of confidence in that system. I'm actually decently confident in the system, but it has been on a three year tear, and im worried I am starting trading it right at the beginning of a big DD period.
Anyway, the signals that are so hard to take are on price charts that alreayd appear overextended in the direction of my signal. They seem to almost universally keep going when i don't buy them (as I wait for the proverbial "dip" that never comes...)
But yes, Big Hog, i agree -- these signals should be a delight and a pleasure to execute. If I can't be confident in this system when I am at all new account highs, imagine what will happen during a significant drawdown?
The thing is I have tested this system on data since 1970, and its pretty rock solid. The thing I don't trust about the results, however, is the role that using continuous contracts plays and the potential it may have for producing skewed results.
Anyway, proof and confidence is an interesting thing when it comes to trading...