I don't much care whether you believe me or not. As I said, best of luck to you.
Not intention of proving it either I bet LOL
Luck LOL you believe in luck while lecturing others how to trade LOL
I don't much care whether you believe me or not. As I said, best of luck to you.
Not intention of proving it either I bet LOL
Luck LOL you believe in luck while lecturing others how to trade LOL
I don't still hold records from 1977, but you could always look up my posts on TMF from 1998. I didn't post to CompuServe.
As for luck, no, I don't believe in it, but you clearly do, which is why I wished it for you.
Again, best of luck to you.
You never have fear of losing money? Then you would be the exception. When a trader trades for his living, has a family and expenses, the fear is real. A bad day, month or year can lead to problems. I've encountered it myself and have watched it MANY times in others.
It's not particularly challenging. If one can connect two dots, he can define a trend.
best post ive seen on the forum for a while
Since when is a backtest not evidence? The guy gave full disclosure, both his data set and his strategy. Like a good science experiment, it's reproducible. Those who wish to disprove it have all the information they need to do so.But there's no evidence that it works (like trickle-down economics). I'm not suggesting that it's garbage, only that it does not address the comment which prompted the post.
Since when is a backtest not evidence? The guy gave full disclosure, both his data set and his strategy. Like a good science experiment, it's reproducible. Those who wish to disprove it have all the information they need to do so.
If you trade size then spread the orders out, this is common knowledge - you don't just submit one large order.
Most traders do not trade the ES and therefore have less liquidity at their disposal. Nor do they go for $5 a share windfalls.
What I'm saying applies to most equities, most futures and a number of currencies.
You do not understand that the volume of 2 million contracts is for the whole day, at any given moment there might be only 10-20 contracts on offer so an order in the hundreds would definitely move the price, especially in the quiet hours (12:30pm to 1:30pm).
If your goal is to get the average price for the whole day then yes, daily volume matters.
Sure, I can buy a large position "in seconds" as well but I know that I will be moving the price with my order and that translates to the bottom line. The goal is not to get filled at any price but to get filled while remaining relatively invisible.
Evidence that it's worth implementing. If a strategy under consideration fails its backtest(s), then there's no point in wasting more time on it.Evidence of what? It still has to be implemented.