Which leads to another thing, going flat in the market because 'you think this is a good idea' is one thing.
But going long again, often there is no compelling reason (no strong buy signal) once the upmove gets underway.
Those flat traders then say when it's too late, "Damn, missed the boat, I'll await a pullback". But it never comes.
My observation over many years, the best bull markets are those which rise on fear, because they just keep on going up.
Exhuberance is the danger signal, not fear.
Which is why, for Indices, if trading the Indices directionally as an outright? I like a repeatable process, that is either "Long" or "Long-Flat".
To see what I mean? Look at the Long-Flat process of the Non-Correlated model. It has a repeatable reason to get out, a repeatable reason to get back in. And you can run history on it, back to like ... 1961, to see how it would have worked out for you.
When you do that? It gives you confidence in doing it into the unknown future.
