Sorry I don't remember who Marcus is. It was actually @MrScalper here on ET who said it.Didnt michael
Marcus say this in the market wizards ?
Last edited:
Sorry I don't remember who Marcus is. It was actually @MrScalper here on ET who said it.Didnt michael
Marcus say this in the market wizards ?
It is very impressive you are able to keep track of some many trades. I would be lucky if I can track 3-5 each day. Is it on autopilot?I sold most of my swing trading inverses today starting premkt to lock in gains from last Thursday & Friday entries I'd held over the weekend.
I'm trying to take action on lessons learned, great to see it paid off.
Here's today's trades
View attachment 226982
It is very impressive you are able to keep track of some many trades. I would be lucky if I can track 3-5 each day. Is it on autopilot?
Sorry I don't remember who Marcus is. It was actually @MrScalper here on ET who said it.
I make both winning trades and stops regularly, here's lessons learned from recent stops.
Situation: back during the market selloff I was up $9000 net profit, successfully swing trading small size (20 - 100 shares at a time) inverse ETFs like SQQQ TVIX UVXY .
I then lost several thousand trying to bottomfish them this last month. Although I'm still profitable on the year, I could've done much better if I wasn't stubborn. I own my fckups.
Lessons learned:
I should've done ETF arb swing trading, like VXX/SVXY TZA/TNA and not been a stubborn permabear
Price action is all that matters, despite pandemic and unemployment and earnings misses and common sense saying market should've kept selling
Don't fight the fed
Buy what goes up at 2day highs, sell what goes down.
Don't overtrade, especially due to fomo
Sound familiar?
... I did correctly manage risk, trading small with conservative stops, but still added up.
.... I'm still bearish and am scaling back into SQQQ VXX SPXS SOXS SDOW TVIX etc, just more cautiously
...and I thought the unemployment numbers would be bad, which they were, etc...
I'm down -$645 today, ouch. That's a big red day for me. My overnight small inverse positions gapped against me.
I bought inverses yesterday late because they ran up strongly into the close, and I thought the unemployment numbers would be bad, which they were, etc.
I admit it, I overtraded too aggressively, impatiently. I sold much of my inverse shares at a loss aftermarket today; I'm still holding a few k worth.
Lesson learned: wait longer before scaling into positions, so you have more unrealized profit to work with.
Example: instead of buying at $32 and scaling in at $36, wait til $40 before adding to a winner.
I'm disappointed in myself for trading too much size aggressively, esp since choppy rangebound market. My hope is that by continuing to be public and transparent about some of my failures it'll help me improve and fck up less.
View attachment 227268
Indeed. And if you look back past the last 7 Thursday numbers, the markets went up 5 of those 7 times, IIRC.
This time though...NFP tomorrow? This will be the big one, along with the unemployment rate. I am absolutely flat for that one in the morning. Tempted as I am to go long on the overnight, which worked out quite handily all week had I had the guts to do it...Mreh. Not this time. I'll try to daytrade it tomorrow with some fliers, but these are uncharted waters. Caution is definitely warranted.
Ken i'll be honest on the short side i think you need the ball rolling a little down before you jump on and try to bottom fish them. Honestly these are all tough trades right now as its very choppy. Your strategy of wait till your up more to scale in more is a good idea . It will prevent you from adding too early on false move which were getting a lot of lately . I know that will be tough because everyone wants to load the lows . But you need sustained moves down to make money in these and the trend must change to down before adding .I sill rarely trade these.