Quote from niko:
I guess 40 draws got in at 23![]()
lol... that made me chuckle. I wonder how 40d is doing. I haven't gotten to interact with him that much since he was on his way out by the time I made my account. However, I feel like I know him pretty well since I've read through his posts multiple times, haha.
Another thing to note is that I think our charts are getting more and more similar. You're staying away from those 5 trades / 10 minutes frenzies, and I am a little less squeamish about finding entries at double bottoms and small RETs within an active D/S line.
I've been able to see much better performance by loosening up a little as I become more comfortable with trader behavior as well. Placing entries further away from price has kept me from getting sucked into false RETs as much since I'm not as scared of missing out on being a point closer to the RET and thinking that will somehow make me more likely to avoid losing trades.
I find it usually gives better opportunities to make more liberal exit criteria like giving price room to breach the last swing low if we're close to a reversal area since sometimes price has to hit resistance several times before it changes direction. The 50% marks also give more opportunities to stay in on continuation, but they also give up a lot of points on big movements if you wait until price makes it all the way back there after the D/S line breaks.
I saved a really good post by DB on scaling exits that really takes some of the pressure off as well. I think there is a lot of room for me to grow in having a much more fluid trading session of scaling in on multiple RETs on a big move, and scaling out as the strength of a movement begins to decline. Always something to work on.
My wife isn't doing too well at the moment, but hopefully when things improve I will be able to get back to being around for the NQ opens, participating in the discussion, and sharing some of my charts and observations with everyone.
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Dug up the DB's post that I mentioned:
"The solution to exits is a simple one: trade as if you were trading five contracts or five lots and abandon the idea of being able to exit with all of them at the exact top or bottom. The goal is to make money, not to prove to oneself what a superior trader one is.
Then determine in advance where each of those contracts will be sold. For example, if one is trading support and resistance, sell the first contract at one or the other. Sell the second contract, for example, at the lower high or the break of the trendline, whichever comes first. Sell the third at whatever you didn't sell at for the second. Sell the fourth, for example, at a breach of the last swing low. Leave the fifth, for example, at breakeven."