Quote from alfonso:
What level of returns is magnificent in whoever's opnion.
What is or is not achievable.
I beg to differ. If the issue is mental ceiling, then the above points are at the heart of the matter.

Quote from Scientist:
You are my brother man!
I trade the same way. And I have -exactly- the same problem - changing between scalping and trending mode. Quite often, I find that I focus on S-, T-, 1-min charts, depth and T&S so much, that I completely oversee the big picture. So I will be scalping away in and out, 5-10 times in a row, and then I oversee such an important point as a 50% retracement or even confluence on a larger timeframe. However, I think that the same problem exists no matter what timeframe you do (i.e. you can oversee major daily levels etc doing 5-min charts), but with scalping you certainly risk the least amount of money in case you miss out on an overpowering, larger timeframe signal.
One thing I have found to be useful is to establish times for the different timeframes.
I.e:
Globex. I watch it from 3:00am, when action starts, until the open, often seizing some great opportunities here before the US day starts. Timeframe is 3-5 minute chart only.
Amateur Hour: Ultra-short-term scalping mode during amateur hour (between 9:32 -10:07). This time offers the finest fruit, you can pick off several points just during this time. However, it's an irony that it's called amateur hour, since this is where anybody but the pros seriously get their boxxers pulled over their head. At least in the futures
Post-Morning & News time: From 10:07 I go into 1-min charts primary, as well as 3-min secondary, targeting larger moves (2-4 points) All the way till 12:00.
Lunchtime: Pretty much at 12:00, I'll go into scalping mode again, targeting between 1-7 Ticks on a trade. Anything but scalping seems insane during lunchtime, unless there's a defined trend, or a good retracement on a larger timeframe, in which case I might of course enter. But scalping is just too swell during this time. Very competitive, too. It's actually harder than am hour, but you can lose less, so it balances.
At 2:15-2:45, depending on the day, I will look at the bigger picture again, that is 1&3&5 min charts, even 10&15 (rather than just 144T, 15S or 1min). Interesting reversal time, there are some nice moves to be caught. Most days, entering on the retests, you can make 2-3 points here, till about 3:00.
3:00 - Closing hour. Pretty much my favourite (after opening hour). Most people seem to fear this time. It's actually abound of opportunities. Just don't try to fade the trend here. Closing hour gives me plenty of opportunities to dissect silly brokers throwing their end-of day orders into the market. Another great thing and really my favourite, is the close rallye, generally from between 3:25-3:45 and ending at around 4:03. I tend to want to close out by the bell, that is 3:59:30. The great thing about the close move is that it tends to have smaller retracements, thus your chances of staying in the trade are larger (generally, in the close trade, I'll target 3-8 pts on the ES) But although the target is quite swell, as a stop you often get away with as little as 6-8T, so I like this in terms of R:R.
So yeha, that's one way of dealing with it better. Set different timeframe regimes for different market periods.
All the Best,
~Scientist![]()
Fantastic post OddTraderQuote from OddTrader:Q
I call the pasive relationship the "cognitive function" and the active relationship the "participating function", and the interaction between the two functions I call "reflexivity".
Reflexivity is, in effect, a two-way feedback mechanism in which reality helps shape the participants' thinking in which thinking and reality may come to approach each other but can never become identical.
Knowledge implies a correspondence between statements and facts, thoughts and reality, which is not possible in this situation.
The key element is the lack of correspondence, the inherent divergence, between the participants' views and the actual state of affairs.
It is this divergence, which I have called the "participant's bias", which provides the clue to understanding the course of events.
That, in very general terms, is the gist of my theory of reflexivity.
--- The Theory of Reflexivity (by George Soros)
UQ
![]()
![]()

That's absolutely right. I never suggested that, either. It's you "with the market", rather than "against the market". However, I want to ride the flow of the market and then take in advance the positions of other traders by predicting their stops via stop-paths. This is an approach far superior to edge trading. I want have stops where the edge traders are getting into the market. I'm not against the market at all here. I'm in fact "serving" the market....Quote from alfonso:
I don't think what you're suggesting above is the best way to look at improving trading performance.
It's not really "you vs the market" in the same way as it's "you vs the golf course".
It's not just about improving your technique. It's particularly about improving your mind, your attitude. Only this will bring permanent change. "Technique" will only last so long as the market does what you think it will. But thinking right is in your mind more than in your indicators or anything.The golf course stays the same, so it's just a matter of you improving your technique and you'll play better and better and better. (At least until such time as physiological factors, such as age, begin to inhibit performance.)
An inaccurate observation that makes all edge traders profit-"scratchers". It's the other way around:The market doesn't stay the same, it's continually changing.
That's a funny theory. So after trading for... Umm... 5 years, you never improve? OK. Well. And what worked great for one year, totally sucks the next? How can you claim that? Also for scalping? Position trading? What kind of trading do you do? Some sort of set-up trading? Please enlighten me.What worked great one year, totally sucks the next.
You can be in the game for fifty years, I suppose, and not really be that much "better", in terms of returns generated, than after you'd played for five years.
It is not really linear at all! Much rather in plateaux, as defined by risk management. "Linear" improvement can only occur if you have a standardized approach, such as setup, crossover etc trading. Any kind of edge stuff.That's precisely why you see excellent traders, who have had many years of excellent returns, have losing years, or months, or whatever, every now and then. Using your "linear" (kind of ) model of improvement, that just shouldn't happen, right?
I appreciate your encouragements, my dear brother Alfonso. I definitely attempt to live by those ideas, it's often harder than anything else, but the power of modelling as you can achieve through NLP, for example, can give the term "self-fulfilling prophecy" a very valid meaning indeed. I am going to start a comprehensive NLP Practitioner Course with INLPTA in Sep... See how much it can bring. It's all in your mindAnyway, all the best bro. If you can develop ideas that pay better than what traders have generally achivieved in the LR, then all the more power to you. Honestly. (Although I've chided you a few times, you do have some very good ideas about getting the most out of life -- if you are actually living those words, then really, what I say shouldn't matter at all.) Go for it.

yeaa na warries moit...Quote from OddTrader:Thanks Scientist.![]()

