Managing Your Trading Time

Time is precious. Wasted time can never be recovered, while wasted effort drains energy and commitment.

All my trades are off the D1 chart and entries are order-driven only. I don't need to watch the markets waiting for an opportunity to enter - no trades are opened live, SL's and TP's are already set. The chart situation can only change after the close of each new day's session. There is generally nothing for me to see if I open the chart intra-day.

Added to this, I use just a few reliable set-ups for trading. I take the features that confirm these for the markets I track and log them on a spreadsheet after each session. I spend more time looking at the spreadsheet to direct me to the best charts than I do looking at the charts themselves.
 
Time is precious. Wasted time can never be recovered, while wasted effort drains energy and commitment.

All my trades are off the D1 chart and entries are order-driven only. I don't need to watch the markets waiting for an opportunity to enter - no trades are opened live, SL's and TP's are already set.

The chart situation can only change after the close of each new day's session.

There is generally nothing for me to see if I open the chart intra-day.

Added to this, I use just a few reliable set-ups for trading. I take the features that confirm these for the markets I track and log them on a spreadsheet after each session. I spend more time looking at the spreadsheet to direct me to the best charts than I do looking at the charts themselves.

how much time/day do you spent on research, charts & TA?

is the time spent on these things that valuable that it provides you with a higher [success] win rate/profit rate ove someone such as myself that spends little if any time on charts & TA?

how many trades on average/day do you do over the course of an average month?
 
how much time/day do you spent on research, charts & TA?

is the time spent on these things that valuable that it provides you with a higher [success] win rate/profit rate ove someone such as myself that spends little if any time on charts & TA?

how many trades on average/day do you do over the course of an average month?


I might spend half an hour a day on TA Monday-Friday, probably an hour at the weekend. I log the TA features that are characteristic of the set-up onto the spreadsheet, then look at the positive charts in more detail for a potential entry point.

This is a top-down approach that definitely keeps me out of low probability trades. Thing is that spending longer looking at weaker charts (with respect to my preferred set-up) is unproductive.

Number of trades per month is a lumpy figure, depending on how "trending" the forex markets are but maybe 20-30. In any case, this figure isn't crucial - maybe I could take a much smaller number of much larger positions.
 
I trade hard all day long which is why I assume its called day trading. I gave up a $300K per year job to do this so I am going all in with my time. I don't take a walk around the block during the day, I don't wash clothes and I don't do errands out and about. I love the first 15 minutes of every trading day and it totally gets me stoked for the day. My heart beats big when I place my first $1M trade. For example, I was up $1000 this morning but got hit hard by the down turn and was down $7000 quickly. But I clawed and scratched my way back with little $500 - $800 wins throughout the day to get to a $352 profit for the day. But I worked at it all day without taking a break. Also, on the occasional time when the market is kicking butt I would never leave my trading desk when the fish are biting -- I'm all in all day long.
 
I trade hard all day long which is why I assume its called day trading. I gave up a $300K per year job to do this so I am going all in with my time. I don't take a walk around the block during the day, I don't wash clothes and I don't do errands out and about. I love the first 15 minutes of every trading day and it totally gets me stoked for the day. My heart beats big when I place my first $1M trade. For example, I was up $1000 this morning but got hit hard by the down turn and was down $7000 quickly. But I clawed and scratched my way back with little $500 - $800 wins throughout the day to get to a $352 profit for the day. But I worked at it all day without taking a break. Also, on the occasional time when the market is kicking butt I would never leave my trading desk when the fish are biting -- I'm all in all day long.[/


I think that’s kind of my point. It’s not always better to work more hours and to work harder. In other professions it is, but not necessarily in trading.

You gave a great example. And in hindsight wouldn't it be better to stop Trading when you’re up 1000 and go and do something else? Working at it “all day and not taking a break“ is not a good way to trade, in my mind.

Taking a break and getting away and breathing and getting some distance and some grounding is really important. In fact, the day that you described is the kind of day that can lead to overtrading and disasters trading . . . and that’s when people can lose sight of their discipline and start making troubling mistakes that can lead to Big losses. Sometimes clawing your way back doesn’t work and your loss gets bigger and bigger. I don’t recommend it as a strategy!

I think the goal is more to be very clear what you’re doing, be intentional, have a high awareness of what’s going on inside of you, have a great patience, and have a shorter period of time that you allocate For trading and then walk away!
 
Managing Your Trading Time

I know sometimes when I sit down to trade I say to myself I'm just going to take a quick look and do a quick trade....[].

Andrea

A simple concept would be to not take a quick look and not to take a quick trade ;)
Best!
 
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