Thanks for your words, Ramoutar.Quote from RAMOUTAR:
"I" have never found backtesting to be a reliable method, that's not to say it isn't a viable way of testing strategy and predetermining risk and reward. I always use discretion in my trades, the challenge for me is keeping that discretion within the parameters of the plan. Having experience with a specific vehicle, whether index, stock, future or trading baseball cards certainly gives a clearer perception. That certainly not sufficient enough, its recognizing the pattern repetition and acting on it. I believe that is tha major cornerstone of technical analysis...capitalizing on repeating patterns.
Futures are a completely different animal, while the TA patterns are the same, the behavior and probability are quite different. In the past I have dabbled in futures, indexes, commodities, etc., and humbly I have no real experience trading outside of stocks and equity options. That for me has its pros and cons...for example I have traded stocks whose RSI was superior to that of an index, and on the flipside I have missed several opportunities in individual stocks when the broader markets have blown right passed me.
In this game, the most important thing for me is being comfortable and not complacent. Planning entry, exit, risk and reward before hand and then using discretion within their parameters works for me. When I began trading in 1990 there was /were no:
- real point and click trading platforms
- trailing stops
- automated stops on Nasdaq stocks
- alerts
- reliable backtesting vehicles
- "Scientist"![]()
That forced me to be more stringent and less discretionary in my approach. Some people on this board never experienced trading without point & click, real time Level II & charts, automated stops on Nasdaq and listed, etc...while many do.
As the technology evolved discretion became more affordable. One of the downsides in having experience is being steamrolled over by people who use the newer technology. I, like many here am happy to have survived the "changing of the guard."
Have a plan, stick to it and evolve...or be consumed
That's what works for me
Thanks Scientist
Okay, you are clearly a much more experienced trader than me and therefore you can refer to a much larger "internal database" of trading experiences, market events and chart patterns and behaviours.
I suppose one day, I will be just as able as you to interpret market action the way you can without any requirement for backtesting or other objective verification.
I am humbled by the wisdom of somebody who's been doing this for 14 years, starting long before "day trading" was even a known term, and has survived all the way through the bubble. Clearly, I do not have such a breadth of experience to refer to, which would be one of my reasons to "focus" on one issue only. Myself, I only started trading after the burst of the big 90's bubble, learnt in a bear market and trying to survive in harsh conditions by testing every single thing I did, before applying it.
I only hope that I'll manage to maintain as much care, discipline and humility as you give to the market, to live in this game as long as you already did.
May prosperity be with you, and thanks for your many great words, essays and other inspirations you have shared on this forum. I greatly appreciate them and think they are amongst the very best and particularly most interesting ever shared in public.
Warmest Regards,
Scientist.
Do you have anymore to sell?