If you could go back in time to when you were a new trader

There are two kinds of traders:

Those that feel bad about their stop losses and

Those that feel worse about the $ they left on the table.

I'm cut from the latter.

I don't know which is worse. :confused:
 
Quote from dbphoenix:

... If one trades price,.....

Based on some of the responses to your statement, there is definite confusion as to exactly what this means.
 
Quote from KDASFTG:

Great Googa Mooga…..as my Sainted Pop used to say when he heard something exceptional. It’s been said before and I’ll say it again; ET is one hell of a treasure hunt!

And BigHog's missive just proved my point once again.

Yes, it is. I've been an intermittent lurker for years, and having recently become more serious about my trading, I became more serious about looking for "treasure" that might help me along the way. I have found a few rich veins to mine here at ET. You haven't posted much, but over the last few months I have noticed that you have a good eye for valuable nuggets, and have placed a few of your own here as well.

I grew up hearing it as "Great Googly Moogly!" I find myself saying it from time to time
 
Quote from moonmist:

When ego reigns supreme, the descent of Long-Term Capital Management to Short-Term Capital Mismanagement.:D

Sorry. Can't resist..............

Lol XD

Bout' sums it up.
 
Quote from Tonkadad:

Based on some of the responses to your statement, there is definite confusion as to exactly what this means.

There always is. But anyone who's interested can always use the link I posted above.
 
Quote from R. Raskolnikov:

There is a big difference between intra day traders who end the day flat vrs large hedge funds who hold positions overnight and for extended periods of time though.

Maybe. But arrogance and ego still exist whether or not you are George Soros, or Joe Newbie. :D

The end result is the same either way, just on different scales.
 
Quote from TheGreatGorilla:

I would agree.

I honestly don't believe anyone who says a strategy is fail proof, usually doesn't end well. Ends with tears and no money left over from all the leverage. An example would be Long-Term Capital Management. They thought they were invincible. They had a good run until the 'impossible' happened. I actually think someone even wrote a book on the fund, but I sadly don't remember the name of it. :(

"When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management"

Very interesting book.

http://www.amazon.com/When-Genius-F...1389492845&sr=1-1&keywords=when+genius+failed
 
Quote from RedTankEra:

How does your simplicity deal with the following:

240min has an uptrending 20 ema

60min has a flat 20 ema.

15min has a downtending 20 ema

3min has an uptrending 20 ema

no serious trader would consider trying to match up signals across four (4) charts in the first place, let alone highly correlated ones all based on time bars to boot.

if you cannot make highly effective trade-entry decisions off one chart or two charts max, four or five or ten more charts won't make the difference.
 
Quote from Lights:

i think i read that somewhere in college.
"will never fail" sounds like famous last words

financial markets have been creating high-odds outcome price patterns since the dawn of trading, they do so today and will continue to do so forever. Those that never figure this out, never realize what they are missing. Those who figure this out, spend all of their time in the markets grinding away around said action points to the exclusion of all else
 
Disagree, my strat utilizes many time frames. It's an objective system, perhaps discretionary systems wouldn't benefit from more than 2 time frames? All I know is what works for me.

Quote from austinp:

no serious trader would consider trying to match up signals across four (4) charts in the first place, let alone highly correlated ones all based on time bars to boot.

if you cannot make highly effective trade-entry decisions off one chart or two charts max, four or five or ten more charts won't make the difference.
 
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