Quote from easyrider:
Trading is not that hard unless you build up a history of losses. Then you are fighting an uphill battle. You are smart to do a lot of papertrading. A lot of people knock it, including Jack I think but it makes no sense to me to trade cash if you dont have a strategy that works on paper and I really wish I hand done much more of it in the beginning. It is eyeopening if you use a decent simulator that puts you in the queue and if your honest in your attempt you find that making consistent paper profits is not all that easy .
Quote from txuk:
what issues have you encountered?
Quote from easyrider:
Trading is not that hard unless you build up a history of losses. Then you are fighting an uphill battle. You are smart to do a lot of papertrading. A lot of people knock it, including Jack I think but it makes no sense to me to trade cash if you dont have a strategy that works on paper and I really wish I hand done much more of it in the beginning. It is eyeopening if you use a decent simulator that puts you in the queue and if your honest in your attempt you find that making consistent paper profits is not all that easy .
Quote from Dantheman:
how is it not easy?
why do i need to be in the queue?
why do i need to use limit orders?
have you tried simply entering when the B/A is at your price instead of using limit orders to enter?
i do market sim orders precisely because i can not trust the simulation fills for limit orders. however, market is another story.
i'm half way to being done with paper trading.
if entry on the right side of the market is essentially all that is needed to make money then any point in the market (with few exceptions due to volume etc.) can be turned into a 'right sided' market entry...
why ever use limit orders again?