Quote from neutrino:
I am not sure if I understood correctly but from what you say may I infer that if you had only a small capital to trade, say something below 100,000, then you would commit all of it to day trading since you can make 50 times more with the same amount of money in comparison to position trading?
Also, would you say that you are a worse position trader than day trader or rather that day trading can yield higher returns with the same risks (and an appropriate capital)?
Now, I see more closely that you are getting responses from people that trade one market two ways. Like the ES or NQ.
My answer was dealng in a way that is parallel to Gary Smith's recommendations. That is, capital is taken out of index profits and applied in streams of short term equities applications.
The viewpoint of doing intraday trading and also short term investing is a practical pragmatic approach for two types of markets, each of which have their specific efficiencies to deliver capital to me.
I work appropriately to extract efficiently what is being presented to me by different kinds of markets each having their specific efficiencies to produce opportunities.
Two pairs of efficiencies.
People who trade the indexes us multiple contracts. I trade at market based upon keeping on the right side of the market at all times. Sometimes I am sidelined due to no activity. By saying I get to a place where it is possible to have partial fills on market orders you can see my capital limitation. I cannot put more into the effort because I would have to change my modus of operation to a less efficient one. As markets get bigger, I will do more. I am capital limited.
For equities, I limit my money streams to a maximum numbers of shares because of two limitations. Timely actions are limited by how much I impact the market personally. I do a series of market trades to enter or exit. As the money velocity of a holding declines I exit. I enter as money velocity increases and passes the stock I am exiting. This is simple first derivative stuff. And it is even more crude. For any price I only hold a maximum number of shares that directly relate to the stocks daily volume. There is a linit that I thought up for how this works.
I trade high beta stocks simply because they make a lot of money for me. They are efficient in providing capital to me. I am efficient in taking capital out.
You can see I enter late and leave early. Equally important is picking high beta stocks to enter and hold. I strive to not impact the market as I trade so it takes me many partial fills to not affect the market.
Now you can see four different efficiencies that basically determine the ratio that I gave you.
My views are basically oriented as a person's who is proactive and creative. The REX person posts from a viepoint that is not proactive and creative.
I am an amateur and I have had the opportunity to look far and wide to see where to operate with a lot of considerations. Time is the most important consideration. I acheive the highet money velocity that I can, all based upon my skills as an individual to participate in the market place. I divide the 7 hours of the day between indexes and equities.
Equal ammounts of capital applied to two different markets turn out to provide a very high contrast in profit taking efficiency. 50:1.
If I compare my best day in each, the cash on cash ratio is 1:100.