Secrets to success in trading

One possible edge is the passage of time. Direction can be (or is) very difficult to predict, while we know a day will go by every 24 hours. Option credit spreads make money given the passage of time. Markets can do 5 things: go up a low, go up a little, stay flat, go down a little, go down a lot. Credit spreads (generally) make money in 4 of the 5 conditions. I do not mean to imply that credit spreads are easy, they are not. When the market goes down hard, one loss can wipe out many winners. There are lots of option books with chapters on credit spreads. A trader needs to find the rules that work for them and their trading style and risk tolerance. I'll offer 3 suggestions from my experience. Options on indexes offer advantages both on taxable gain rates and tax reporting. Trading more often (i.e. weekly vs. monthly) helps to smooth P&L and the equity curve. When losses occur, it may be better to accept a limited loss and move onto the next trade vs. performing "adjustments" which can sometimes backfire and make a loss worse. This method nicely with weekly trading where each trade is less important by itself because you get 52 in a year vs. 12 with monthly trades. Be sure to thoroughly backtest any strategy through a variety of bull and bear markets before going live.

Don't you see that you have included Direction into another set of unknown factors of the credit spread? So now you trying to predict much more than just trend. You also have to factor whether you sold Prem and bought fair value, but fact remains you do them against trends, more likely to lose.

But I agree Credit Spreads are reasonable way to go, but I only put them on dealing with directional. Get out as soon at they hit makeable targets. And when they don't work out, I just keep them on but have built adjustments pretty fair away waiting for the dead cat bounce.
 
One possible edge is the passage of time. Direction can be (or is) very difficult to predict, while we know a day will go by every 24 hours. Option credit spreads make money given the passage of time. Markets can do 5 things: go up a low, go up a little, stay flat, go down a little, go down a lot. Credit spreads (generally) make money in 4 of the 5 conditions. I do not mean to imply that credit spreads are easy, they are not. When the market goes down hard, one loss can wipe out many winners. There are lots of option books with chapters on credit spreads. A trader needs to find the rules that work for them and their trading style and risk tolerance. I'll offer 3 suggestions from my experience. Options on indexes offer advantages both on taxable gain rates and tax reporting. Trading more often (i.e. weekly vs. monthly) helps to smooth P&L and the equity curve. When losses occur, it may be better to accept a limited loss and move onto the next trade vs. performing "adjustments" which can sometimes backfire and make a loss worse. This method nicely with weekly trading where each trade is less important by itself because you get 52 in a year vs. 12 with monthly trades. Be sure to thoroughly backtest any strategy through a variety of bull and bear markets before going live. When first going live, start very small (maybe 1 contract).
a lot of good stuff in what you have explained.
there is a cost with hedging or options.
it may be difficult to see direction because those behind market movements know traders' psychology.
And those who know direction and in the correct position, are convinced by continuous reversal signals that they have to book profit.most reversal signals fail.this takes some time to understand.
The market is not moved by GOD,it is moved by big money operators who know how the small traders think and know how they will react.
If it is moved by man, another man can beat them.in my years of losses this is what i told myself repeatedly.
money is never lost in trading it only shifts to another pocket
 
more than this...
of course there are no secrets.

there are no secrets in Chinese language.
but you have got to learn the language to understand it.

And,if you want to make a living out of it,you have to become fluent and it may take 5-10 years.
The language of markets are no different
Market movements are public knowledge

do not imagine that you can sit on your back side imbibe the language from an expert.You have to learn and put a lot of effort
 
An indicator is just statistics, a chart, lines, crossovers, a band, is just a graphical representation. It's what you do with it that counts. The same indicator may represent a buy signal to one side and the exact same indicator can represent a sell signal to other side. So many forget that ...
yes why is that?
because the buy side and the sell side are not trading the same time frame.
both may be right and both will make money.
buy side hourly time frame but the sell side may be on 4hourly or daily or weekly.
that is why you always find buyers and seller at any given time

 
yes why is that?
because the buy side and the sell side are not trading the same time frame.
both may be right and both will make money.
buy side hourly time frame but the sell side may be on 4hourly or daily or weekly.
that is why you always find buyers and seller at any given time
But you only see 1 side as per your previous post.
 
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