Trading intra-day takes a toll on a healthy body. It is ok if you are profitable and still healthy but certainly not ok if you are on chemotherapy.
I've had a lousy year trading ES. The lack-of-volatility, overlayed with six months of chemotherapy, just about prompted me to throw in the towel.
First lesson: Don't trade while undergoing chemo.
Second lesson: Well, that's the point of this post. Bear with me....
I just finished watching one of John Grady's excellent webinar videos on order flow. He appears to be a proponent of trading without charts, using just order flow info (in this case as presented on the Jigsaw platform). He asserts that prop firms don't allow newbie traders to use charts at all. Moreover, in this algo-driven enviroment, where the bots are scalping for two-to-four ticks, he says it makes sense to do what the bots do. He advocates trading extremes of the buzz-n-fuzz range for ticks.
Ok, a couple of questions:
1) Why would I want to compete head on with bots at their own game? Doesn't any advantage of discretionary trading stem from the fact that skilled discretionary traders are able to transcend the noise and capitalize on imbalances that lead to price dislocation?
2) Doesn't such an approach leave one vulnerable to account-decimating overtrading?
3) Am I a Luddite, seeking to justify the old ways of doing things when those old ways just don't work anymore? Maybe "chemo brain" is not too blame for the cascade of poor entries and worse exists. Maybe charts really are yesterday's tech, and ES traders need to be order flow scalpers in order to survive.
Thoughts, anyone?
Thanks! I'll have to watch this. Lots of great stuff on youtube.I recall an Andrew Lo lecture I found very useful in understanding efficient markets and such.
I chose the NQ over the ES years ago and have never had reason to regret it. The NQ is volatile, it's directional, it's predictable, and it moves.
If chart trading were dead, I'd be dead too!! And I ain't dead!!
I've never tried to trade ES and wouldn't fancy it: to me, it looks a little like watching paint dry
ES and NQ not so different.
Point value of NQ is 40% of the point value of the ES, but NQ is about 2.5x more volatile.
NQ is superior when it comes to the number of entry opportunities on any given day
I've had a lousy year trading ES. The lack-of-volatility, overlayed with six months of chemotherapy, just about prompted me to throw in the towel.
First lesson: Don't trade while undergoing chemo.
Second lesson: Well, that's the point of this post. Bear with me....
I just finished watching one of John Grady's excellent webinar videos on order flow. He appears to be a proponent of trading without charts, using just order flow info (in this case as presented on the Jigsaw platform). He asserts that prop firms don't allow newbie traders to use charts at all. Moreover, in this algo-driven enviroment, where the bots are scalping for two-to-four ticks, he says it makes sense to do what the bots do. He advocates trading extremes of the buzz-n-fuzz range for ticks.
Ok, a couple of questions:
1) Why would I want to compete head on with bots at their own game? Doesn't any advantage of discretionary trading stem from the fact that skilled discretionary traders are able to transcend the noise and capitalize on imbalances that lead to price dislocation?
2) Doesn't such an approach leave one vulnerable to account-decimating overtrading?
3) Am I a Luddite, seeking to justify the old ways of doing things when those old ways just don't work anymore? Maybe "chemo brain" is not too blame for the cascade of poor entries and worse exists. Maybe charts really are yesterday's tech, and ES traders need to be order flow scalpers in order to survive.
Thoughts, anyone?

chart trading will never die - it's just a tool...
but one should never confuse the tool with the method , which uses the tool
and Grady (whoever he is) is not an idiot - he popularizes right ideas (for brokers and props): churning the trader's account (via trading a-la bots) is the best way for brokers and props to get the most commissions of the trader's account before the bozo will lose everything to market anyway![]()
When you explain it from the broker's "account churning, generating commissions" perspective, makes perfect sense.