Quote from billyjoerob:
I suspect most failed traders attempt some kind of reversion to the mean strategy . . . shorting tops and buying bottoms, whether on five minute charts or long term. If you ever followed the Ameritrade Index, the Ameritraders bot weakness and sold strength. What many people think is the smart strategy -- buying weakness -- is in fact the strategy of nearly every retail trader. If you look at academic studies, traders tend to sell winners to fund losers and buy weak stocks that are in the news. They will buy winners, but only when it looks like a "sure thing" -- it been going up every single day and won't go down. Look at SIRI at the end of 2004, and look at the volume - that was a true small trader frenzy. On one day, 95% of all Ameritrade trades were in SIRI. If you can do just two things - buy strength and use risk management, ie stops - you will do better than 99% of traders.
I have to agree, nearly every noob strategy i've seen involves reversion to the mean. Traders naturally decide something is too high or too low, and expect it to return to the middle range.
You guys i'm sure there's a multitude of reasons why traders fail, but has anyone ever dealt with the problem i presented in the first post? (too much information in the market, impossible to keep track)