Okay. The eye's bias can only cause you trouble to the extent that you don't have predefined and objective entry and exit criteria. If your criteria are valid, then they should keep you from being sucked into too much chop. What I fail to understand is how you can go about coding and automating a discretionary approach. That concept is well over my head.Quote from dima777:
THANKS.ACYUALLY I AM DEVELOPING FULLY AUTOMATED SYSTEM
I WILL ADD THAT I HAVE CONCLUDED THAT MY EYE CAN BE BIASED AFTER HAVING CODED MY DISCRETIONARY APPROACH..PC WILL NEVER SEE WHAT IS NOT THERE
Quote from Pa(b)st Prime:
Instead of viewing my remarks as "rude' why not try to learn. In all liklihood (99.999%) I'm more experienced and profitable than you. That being said I'll give you a quick mini-thought that I get paid to give clients. A pro-bono for my "rudeness."
First: It matters little what time frame you're looking at. "Chop" is relative (like everything eh?). Chop can be defined as in a range. The market has found value at a price point and the trade is just a random auction back and forth. Sellers dry up on the lows buyers dry up on the highs. No need for a definition-a simple look at a bar chart tells all. If you're using Bollinger bands you'll see the bands narrow and move sideways. You'll see a preponderance of bars move back and forth through your 21 period ma. Doesn't matter if it's a 1 minute or a monthly. Once again it's relative to your time frame. What ends the chop?
For starters prices doing something that they didn't do before. If ES hasn't made a bigger move than 7pts one way or the other over x periods the moment the market moves 7.25 it's now done something not true to form. The profile has changed. Will there be follow through? Probably to some degree. Will there be massive follow through? There's no way of telling. All you can do is make the bet and put in a stop at a price that shouldn't be hit if the market is indeed going to expand it's usual range. I suggest you read Curtis Faith's Way of the Turtle for some simple break out formulas.
Just accept that there's no right answers because you're dealing with unknowable outcomes. There's always going to be false breakouts that do nothing more than cause short covering and new longs to appear with their buying then checked by aggressive sellers laying in the weeds higher. Just set up your trades as much as you can with some idea of probabilities and let your positive expectancy smooth out the disappointments from so many individual bummers.
Quote from Thunderdog:
Okay. The eye's bias can only cause you trouble to the extent that you don't have predefined and objective entry and exit criteria. If your criteria are valid, then they should keep you from being sucked into too much chop. What I fail to understand is how you can go about coding and automating a discretionary approach. That concept is well over my head.
Because it has always been my understanding that only systematic trading approaches can be coded for automation. Because it has always been my understanding that discretionary trading is essentially the antithesis of automated trading.Quote from dima777:
why this is so hard to understand....all technical analysis can be coded - so long as it is based only on the price and no fundamentals for that matter..
Quote from Thunderdog:
Because it has always been my understanding that only systematic trading approaches can be coded for automation. Because it has always been my understanding that discretionary trading is essentially the antithesis of automated trading.