Seems liks day trading is all but finished!

Quote from WinSum:

Jeff,

What is the web page to subscribe to the NYSE Open Book service?

Your trading software vendor should have access to it. I use Arca thru RealTick and Bloomberg, and both have it for $50/month.

As far as it being outdated and slow, maybe people should take another look at it. It is usually about 5-10 seconds behind the orders. You can test it by placing an order and then canceling it. Trust me, it works.

The specialist cannot forget to cancel orders. He actually never touches the OpenBook, it is updated automatically. As far as it not reflecting orders in the crowd, you are absolutely correct. If you really want to be a player, get a line on a $2 broker and get looks from him. All you have to do is throw him some business every now and them. Those guys are starving for business.

All I'm saying is if you want to make it in his business, you need as many tools/weapons as possible. Why? Because your competition has them. I have 8 monitors running realtick, esignal, metastock, and bloomberg. Other guys on our floor use even more tools. I dont work for OpenBook, so I have nothing to gain if you use it or not, its up to you.

Jeff
 
I find Openbook very useful. The only problem I have these days are the specialists that freeze the book on you when the market is moving. He's probably front-running for his own account before deciding to unfreeze the book and spreading the quotes. Friggin' crooks!
 
the hell-bent-on-daytrading attitude is a definite negative for everybody even though some will get on hot streaks and feel on top of the world, its a great high. Its like a gambling addiction, and everybody figures it out sooner or later. Stop trading for the adrenaline rush and you will realize that a longer time frame and less leverage will allow you to have a normal life and still make money.
 
Quote from MondoTrader:

Stop trading for the adrenaline rush and you will realize that a longer time frame and less leverage will allow you to have a normal life and still make money.

What if I don't trade for the adrenaline rush, but still am a scalper? Would that be acceptable?
 
Quote from jefftrader:

Quote from WinSum:

I have 8 monitors running realtick, esignal, metastock, and bloomberg.

I'd rather have 2 monitors running a resolution of 1600x1200 each than 8 monitors at 800x600.
 
Quote from MondoTrader:

the hell-bent-on-daytrading attitude is a definite negative for everybody even though some will get on hot streaks and feel on top of the world, its a great high. Its like a gambling addiction, and everybody figures it out sooner or later. Stop trading for the adrenaline rush and you will realize that a longer time frame and less leverage will allow you to have a normal life and still make money.

lach.gif
 
Quote from Lobster:



I'd rather have 2 monitors running a resolution of 1600x1200 each than 8 monitors at 800x600.
I strongly would rather not do either. 1600x1200 is a sure way to go blind. 1280 x 1024 is the smallesst I will go. I guess you can reconfigure the font sizes at 1600x1200, but then what's the point?

nitro
 
Quote from IndexTrader:


acrary: could you shed some light on why/how you determine to increase size as opposed to reducing? One would think that if conditions are less than favorable, then reducing the #contracts/shares would appear to be the thing to do.

Thanks!

Normally in my daytrading, I try to locate a entry near the beginning of the days primary trend. For example, the emini range has been about 16 pts. My stuff will try to locate a entry within 3 points of the start of the primary trend and put on a 4 point stop. This gives me the 3:1 reward to risk ratio I try to keep. Normally, I'd ride the trend until the 16 point range was met and then apply a tight trailing profit stop.

In this market, my stuff is getting the start of a trend and then getting blown out by the countertrend moves. To avoid this, I decided to use a target of 1/4 of the days range (4 pts.) and go for a higher hit rate. This gives me 1:1 on the reward to risk, so the target must be hit early, otherwise my win:loss ratio is going to drop to around 50%. To make the same dollars as my previous method, I'm going to have to increase size of each position to 4x my previous size. I hate not letting profits run all day, but until the followthrough starts coming back I've got to be a little more defensive.

The idea doesn't change my entrypoint or really change the idea behind the trades. All it affects is my money management.

Here's a example using one of my production systems modified to use targets from the beginning of this year to the end of last month for 1 SP contract:
 

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