Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
It seems like every few weeks a newbie is posting some variation of what audi posted. Experienced traders know just how hard this game is, so they tend to be discouraging. Other newbies who have made some money tend to underestimate how hard it is and volunteer advice that is well-meaning but useless.
If you are committed to trading, you will find a way. For example, have you researched all the advice given to other newbies on ET over the years? Have you studied the journals that are posted here? Have you researched the incredible posts by Acrary on system trading? Or are you just looking for someone to hand you the keys to the kingdom? People who have spent years and tens of thousands of dollars developing a methodology are not just going to hand it over because you ask. You have to do the work.
The first piece of advice I give in this situation is to get some backtesting s/w and spend weeks testing. People will say backtesting proves nothing, but how do you expect to make money in the future if you can't make money on historical data? You will quickly learn a few valuable lessons,eg popular indicators are not helpful, volume is not helpful, tight stops are not helpful, scalping for a tick or two is nearly impossible, systems that make money for a few weeks often then blow up.
The next piece of advice is to trade with the dominant trend of the next higher time frame. If you're daytrading, trade only in the direction of the 60 minute trend. That eliminates a lot of indecision right there because if the trend is up, you will not take a short trade for any reason. Will you miss the ocassional reversal? Yes, but that is the price you pay for having a methodology that keeps you out of a lot of bad trades.
Then you need to develop an entry trigger. It can be an oscillator divergence confirmed by the break of a moving average, a trend line break, a reversal bar, a break of a pivot level or other significant level,etc.
Then you learn to manage the trade. Take your mental stop to b/e after it has gone n points in your favor. Learn to spot failures, significant levels where price is drawn to, etc. This is the art part of trading, knowing when to exit.
Discipline is crucial because it is very easy to piss away a months worth of profits on one bad trade. Respect your disaster stop, never let a profit go to a loss(profit defined as b/e plus a noise zone), don't let more than half a big profit retrace. Expect to make a lot of mistakes and suboptimal decisions, always remembering the key to long term success is to avoid the big killing loss or string of losses.
Trading is not an everyday activity. Take time off, be aware of burnout. Keep in mind it is about making money, not being right or proving to the world how smart you are.