Joe and Bob are both probably on the right path, and doing the right thing. A purely discretionary system works just find. Many traders are proof of that. If you think in terms of what is important and build your philosophy around solid and long term proven idea's you will be able to trade in changing markets without jumping from one hot setup to the next. Generally this would be based upon some form of pattern recognition, which is by its definition discetionary.
A purely mechanical sytem also works just fine. I have a friend who runs an arbs system in equities, 100% mechanical and 0% discretion. The system returns over 500% a year with pretty small risk (its maximum capital is also very small, small enough that it would keep it from being of interest to most of the big houses that do this kind of trading, but large enough to be just great for my friend). A lot of the money being run in the futures market is also 100% rules based with no discretion applied. I suspect that this kind of trading appeals very much to engineers and other mathematical types, as they are who I most commonly see using them successfully.
Brandon
A purely mechanical sytem also works just fine. I have a friend who runs an arbs system in equities, 100% mechanical and 0% discretion. The system returns over 500% a year with pretty small risk (its maximum capital is also very small, small enough that it would keep it from being of interest to most of the big houses that do this kind of trading, but large enough to be just great for my friend). A lot of the money being run in the futures market is also 100% rules based with no discretion applied. I suspect that this kind of trading appeals very much to engineers and other mathematical types, as they are who I most commonly see using them successfully.
Brandon
