The simplest way to demonstrate skilled tennis playing is to play a game. The best way to demonstrate skilled trading is to put on a trade. Anything else is just ballshit.
There is still no explanation why putting up a trade that has already been entered into the market would affect the trade's performance. That's the excuse given for not showing a trade. Unfortunately, this is going to get the claimant killed on the argument. So, let's see some squirming, before keeling over.
Well I'm gonna bite and answer this.
Due to the fact that i feel I owe the community here for helping me along the path, albeit with
a lot of misinformation and trolling but hey i guess that's the beauty of ET.
Lets take the NQ for example.
The average bid size on each tick during normal liquid hours is about 30 - 50 contracts (last time i check, I don't trade this frequently).
____|_28___
____|_30___
_31_|______
_28_|______
Say you have an intraday strategy that averages.
Average win : 6 ticks
Average loss : 4 ticks
With a 55% win rate
So you're average ticks per trade comes down to : 1.5 ticks
So what's the strategy max capacity ? probably around the average size of the bid of one tick
which is 30, anymore than that and you'll get slippage that will eat away your profits.
There's probably hundreds of intraday strategies that will work on NQ, but for this specific strategy
it is constrained by the above. hence why retail daytraders seldom share their secret sauce.
now try to imagine what happens when you day trade the more exotic least liquid markets.
since you have a love of cattle try and see the average offer size on LE.