Quote from nitro:
trendlover, no, I have no feelings when trading the model. It is a number. If a, then b, else c. Zero subjectivity. Do I hold personal opinions, sure, but if I acted on those, it would be in a different account.
Is there a bias since I seem to post shorts rather than longs? Well, the model wants to be short more often than not. What can I do?
Abandon your flawed model?
Look, it's obvious to me what is happening here. You have a system that (maybe) works in a trendless market. But it sucks in a steadily uptrending market, the kind that characterises the price action a long-term bull market.
This problem is as old as the hills - trend-followers designing models that work good for trends, but are awful for ranging choppy markets. Mean reversion traders designing models that work well for ranging choppy markets, but are awful for slowly trending, low volatility markets.
Now, you can either keep protesting about how the market isn't doing what you think it will (the model is 100% YOUR prediction, since you control the inputs and system design 100% - so don't complain 'what can I do?'). Or you can conclude that your system is deeply flawed (or at least it's wrong for this kind of market environment), realise you have a big gap in your knowledge, go back to the drawing board, and start from scratch again, this time incorporating what you have learned from this debacle.
But to me it doesn't look like you have learned much. You have ignored repeated advice on this thread for months and months, advising you to have a 'plan B' in case the market keeps rallying. You have stubbornly persisted with a flawed model, and the idea of adaptability or change seems to be anathema to you. If you don't change your attitude, you will spend the rest of your trading career bashing your head against the wall in futility, not learning anything new, just rehashing the same mistakes that all are so typical of close-minded science types i.e. thinking the world is as systematic, limited and static as their own dogmatic belief systems.
My sincere advice is to withdraw 90% of the capital from your trading accounts, and put the money into a balanced ETF/mutual fund index-tracking portfolio e.g. 50% stocks 25% Treasuries 25% corporate bonds. Experiment with your remaining 10%, at least then if you lose it won't be too big a deal, and your portfolio investments will grow steadily over time with moderate volatility. If your trading turns around and does well for 3 consecutive years of major outperformance, then you can start putting more capital back into it.
Cover the downside first, and wait until your trading technique is a lot better before you risk any serious money in the markets.