Exactly where you went,which in my humble opinion is more a discretionary art form than anything else.Or a curve fitted optimisation 
Im not saying you aren't a great discretionary trader able to enter trades and rarely get stopped out,but that would make you a unicorn.Unicorns can take somewhat imprudent size,mere mortals should not...
IMHO,a systematic approach with proper money management is the most important piece to the puzzle. That affords you multiple chances to be right,which is the next best thing to having great entries and rarely getting stopped

Im not saying you aren't a great discretionary trader able to enter trades and rarely get stopped out,but that would make you a unicorn.Unicorns can take somewhat imprudent size,mere mortals should not...
IMHO,a systematic approach with proper money management is the most important piece to the puzzle. That affords you multiple chances to be right,which is the next best thing to having great entries and rarely getting stopped
Good entries have a big impact on the expectancy. And that is the key to prudent risk management. And I found out that good entries have a very big impact on (lowering) risk, and lowering drawdowns. Which leaves room for bigger leverage.
They also enable you to use smaller stops. Add compounding and you will see the difference in returns even with your eyes closed.
So the logical, but not realistic, solution is:
Try to pick all the bottoms for each long and all tops for each short entry, which is impossible, and you would have almost no losing trades, or at least small losses.
So the logical, realistic aim is to get as close as possible to these optimal entry points.
Where do you think I am going?
