Looks like my "bull market" call of yesterday was actually a call of a top in the bonds.....seems like they are trading below resistance which seems impenetrable......I guess it's time to start selling....
Quote from SethArb:
hello
sorry I have not read the whole thread but have you found some sort of edge yet that works in your timeframe or hours that you trade ? have you gotten a better control of your position size
yet relative to account size?
have you ever traded anything else besides bonds ?
good luck to you sir
Quote from mogul:
to the OP: trade 1 lots for 2 years without exception
if you can't stay at 1 lot, that's your issue right there
if you feel the urge to trade more size, it's the gambler inside you talking
Quote from vital-statistix:
And mowery was right - this is a thread to be cherised of how not to do things.
Quote from JMowery1987:
I was hoping Truth would change, but he just keeps pushing harder and harder, already up to 7 lots, he is money hungry, and he is trying so hard to make his money goals.
Good advice m8.Quote from JMowery1987:
He is just so impatient to stick with minimal lots to prove to him for a few months that his system was solid.
He has 7 lots now, and he is probably thinking he is doing great, until he has a run of bad luck that is going to destroy him, where'as if he was at 1 lot, it wouldn't affect him that much and he could learn from it.
This is classic, again, I'd print this stuff out as things not to do as a trader, as this is a huge reason why I believe many fail, although I'm not sure, I can just see so many just taking on bigger risk just because they think they are doing well. I was at 100 shares, then 200, then 300, then I went up to 500, and stayed there , and that is where I'm hovering around now. Just taking it slow. Now I don't know anything about the t-bonds, sorry for not knowing, and I don't know how much a tick value is on the t-bond exactly, but I know that 7 lots on the YM would be a pretty good amount of risk for a single trade, so I know he is taking a lot of risk.