Problem with trading 1 contract only

Trading with 1 contract really limits your flexibility doesn't it? With 2 contracts you could cover 1, leave your stop in place and wait for the other to pan out (or not).

The real question is why would you enter with a target beyond an obvious support level?
Sounds like your prognosis of where price is going said to wait for support rather than entering short now.

The trade setup creates a target level. The support level I mentioned is just another area the market needs to clear through to get to the target level. I did not say it was a significant support level, if it was such an important area, I would just cover at that area instead.
 
I'll repeat...backtest to determine how ofte
...Let's say I am short ES......I have a target level based on a setup of 1900. I am short from 1917, and there is a mid area of support at 1908.

So ES comes down to 1908, I could take profit or hold out for 1900 level. If I was trading size I could sell 1/3 at 1908 and let the other 2/3 run.

But if I am trading 1 contract, I have to either sell at 1908 or wait out for full target level of 1900. If I don't take profit, price can catch bids and come back to my entry level and make my winner into a loser unless I had a trailing stop. If I was stubborn and held on thinking it could hit 1900, I could have given up a huge profit by not taking partial profit at 1908.

So how do you guys trade 1 contract with this limitation/difference compared to trading with size?

This is not complicated and I'm lost for words why you seem so confused.

1) Backtest your trade management rules. If you have not trade management rules and you don't have a valid reason for your profit targets...stop trading until you have rules for profits/exits instead of trying to wing it.

2) To say you have a profit target is also to say you have a reason why you think it will drop from 1917 to 1908. You should be monitoring that reason to see if the reasons is still there when it reaches the mid - level.

3) You call something a mid - level...trail your trade if mid - level is reach. How far to trail between 1908 and 1917 ? That's where your backtest and recent trading results will help you.

4) If you're asking these types of questions about S&P 500 Emini ES futures...you shouldn't be trading it. It is not a trading instrument for newbie traders and it is not a trading instrument to be learning how to trade. Its a trading instrument for professional traders and veteran traders.

The recent volatility environment for the Emini futures involving that strange sudden chop in the intraday trading session that repeats multiple times every trading day since August...its tough even on veteran traders. Seriously, if you have not done any backtesting such as comparing your backtest results of your trade method on other futures trading instruments versus your backtest results on the Emini ES futures to determine if Emini ES is the proper trading instrument for you and/or you have not done any backtesting on your trade management...

You're already at a great disadvantage in trading Emini ES futures.
 
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personally, when it gets close to my limit I just pray. I'm not trying to convert you, but it works about 50% of the time. otherwise, if it gets close to my limit and I don't get filled I "analyze". If I think it will finally get hit I hang on, but if I think I missed it I just close out at the market. If the market is trending I just try to go with the trend. But if I think it is chopping I will try to buy lows or sell highs. But since you are trading consistently and successfully you already know all of that. What again was the question?

Hahaha, yeah I usually have a set limit target level and also analyzing constantly to see whether market will hit it or change course. I havent tried praying however.

My question was if you have a target level based on a trade setup, but in between your entry and target there are obstacles as in support/resistance, when trading 1 contract how do you manage your trade? With size, you can reduce risk at the first obstacle.
 
that's why I never look at my cards. I have too many tells. If I look at my cards all the good players already know what I have and know exactly how to play them against me. If I feel good I just bet the pot. And some student of a Russian book who still thinks 2 aces are better than 7 deuce off suit will say, "But you haven't even looked at your cards!" To which I reply, "I don't need to look at them to know I can beat you." (in my dreams)

lol oh so your that guy. Sometimes it's actually harder to play against opponents who do that sort of thing, ya never know what the hell to expect from them on any hand and you wonder if they have ever even played. Sometimes they get lucky as hell ( in the short term) but they won't be around over longer periods of time playing like that. Akin to a newbie making a killing his first month in futures, then busting later on.
 
I would start trading 3 lots, only if you have though plenty of capital to support 3 lots. If not you probably need to try and raise enough capital to get you there. I think the last thing you want to do is change a successful strategy because of capital restraints.

Well I have the capital but I want to first be very consistent in trading 1 lot before I move to 2.... and then eventually 3. My main problem I realized is that I did not read what the average profit was for a ES trader in a week. I would be greedy and going for what a successful ES trader(1 lot) makes in a week every day and to hold onto my winners(for the jugular) without a trailing stop. I believe if I really limit my trades and am happy enough with 8-10 points on ES a day instead of 20, I can improve a lot from here.

The only way to kind of do what you want to do is trading a 1 lot with a trailing stop. But honestly it's not really the same/what you want to accomplish on the profit side.

Right....I mean instead of trading ES I could switch back to SPY and then have the trade management that I want to do with ES, but I am just wondering how all the traders dealt with this dilemma of only having one contract to manage.

P.S. I've never used a trailing stop, just manually adjust stops =p
 
Hahaha, yeah I usually have a set limit target level and also analyzing constantly to see whether market will hit it or change course. I havent tried praying however.

My question was if you have a target level based on a trade setup, but in between your entry and target there are obstacles as in support/resistance, when trading 1 contract how do you manage your trade? With size, you can reduce risk at the first obstacle.
if you have a target, and your target gets hit, then what? Just do it all over again? Until when? Until it finally never gets hit and you get stopped out? Or blown out? That doesn't sound like much of a plan to me.

Man I'm the best damn trader that ever lived. Give me a stop and a target and I can hit my target almost every time. I'm what you call a sharpshooter. Very high hit rate. It's all been backtested.
 
lol oh so your that guy. Sometimes it's actually harder to play against opponents who do that sort of thing, ya never know what the hell to expect from them on any hand and you wonder if they have ever even played. Sometimes they get lucky as hell ( in the short term) but they won't be around over longer periods of time playing like that. Akin to a newbie making a killing his first month in futures, then busting later on.
I'm always the first one to leave the table in those $20 tournaments I play in. I use to play at a casino in New Mexico and if there was not a game I could just sit at the table and they would call all the locals and let them know I was there and in 15 minutes we would have a full table.
 
2) To say you have a profit target is also to say you have a reason why you think it will drop from 1917 to 1908. You should be monitoring that reason to see if the reasons is still there when it reaches the mid - level.

3) You call something a mid - level...trail your trade if mid - level is reach. How far to trail between 1908 and 1917 ? That's where your backtest and recent trading results will help you.

The recent volatility environment for the Emini futures involving that strange sudden chop in the intraday trading session that repeats multiple times every trading day since August...its tough even on veteran traders. Seriously, if you have not done any backtesting such as comparing your backtest results of your trade method on other futures trading instruments versus your backtest results on the Emini ES futures to determine if Emini ES is the proper trading instrument for you and/or you have not done any backtesting on your trade management...

Thanks wrbtrader, backtesting is something I need to really work on. Just gonna be straight up and lay it out that I have not done any backtesting whatsoever. I do keep a trade log and do a video journal almost everyday however in reviewing trades/mistakes.

In regards to #2, I am constantly analyzing if my trade still has valid reasons for it to work or if there is a sudden change of wind. However you also mentioned the strange sudden chop on intraday like from 11:38AM-12:39PM PT on 9/23/2015. Even in Michael Douglas's book, you never really know what the market can do. That's why I have a certain methodology but never certain on what the outcome will be, but I can manage my risk.

#3 really helps. I will definitely have to read up on back-testing to make use of this, thank you.
 
if you have a target, and your target gets hit, then what? Just do it all over again? Until when? Until it finally never gets hit and you get stopped out? Or blown out? That doesn't sound like much of a plan to me.

Man I'm the best damn trader that ever lived. Give me a stop and a target and I can hit my target almost every time. I'm what you call a sharpshooter. Very high hit rate. It's all been backtested.

R:R of 1 to 4, if target gets hit I get out, and wait patiently again for another high probability setup.
So with market bounce intraday today i pretty much covered my VXX calls right at the top of VXX/bottom of ES, I can spot key areas. How do I backtest how high the markets will bounce after identifying a key reversal area? Imo you simply can't until the market gives you signals of where it wants to take it.
 
For trading 3 contracts, lets say the margin isn't a problem for you, but I've seen ES run $12 ($1800 @ 3 contracts) within 5-minutes, so my question is what sort of account equity do you think would be safe have when trading 3-contracts? like the $12 move in 5 minutes would be over 7% of a 25K account for example.

As far as day trading....If you are risking 12 points what is your profit goal? 24 points ? Risking 12 points on an ES trade seems like a lot to me. During that 1-2 week period where there were 60 points+ daily ranges then maybe risk that knowing you could capture 24 points on your winners. But even that seems very aggressive. Now that things have slowed down a bit risking 12 points seems way too much.

Yes there were 12+ point moves in 5 min a few weeks ago, but I wouldn't get hung up on that as there was a huge increase in volatility for a few days.
 
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