2. Who among you are willing to discuss or reveal your strategy?
To expand on my comment, there are those that come to day trading thinking they can get good at reading charts, order flow or whatever and that will be the key to profits. Of course this requires a lot of screen time because they do not have the ability to quantity and test their ideas without actual paper trading and analyzing the results. These traders are essentially bringing a knife to a gun fight as they are competing against algorithms and machines that can analyze way more data and execute trades in an unemotional, consistent manner. Note that I am talking about day trading which the OP is doing. With swing and longer term trading, automation is not as important. One has to ask themselves what is their competitive advantage. As you mentioned, there are those that are successful without automation and that is great for them. The OP is clearly not in that category based on his postings.Actually, if you're not automated...you do not need to "stare at the screen all day".
In fact, if you see people say they "stare at the screen all day"...they aren't just talking about trading. They are talking about learning, studying, hanging out online at social media trading sites.
The last newbie that said they stare at their "screen all day" and worried about getting burnt out...
After questioning him further...I discover he actually only traded 2 hours per day, 1 hour surfing Elitetrader.com and ForexFactory.com, 1 hour reading articles online about the financial markets at CNBC.com & Bloomberg.com, 1 hour of lunch and then heading off to his part-time job for 3 - 4 hours of work.
That's the typical schedule of those that stare at their "screens all day".
Yet, reality is that if you're efficient in your trading...you really only need to put in about 2 - 3 hours per day of trading even if you're not automated. Therefore, those that stare at their screens all day are actually doing other things not related to actual trading via the example of one particular trader.
Think about that statement very carefully...stare at the screens all day. Everybody has to eat and then go to the toilet and later sleep. Just not possible to stare at the screens all day. Its a statement often misused by us traders to validate (merit) traversing into automated trading.
Today's trading environment much different then that 20 years ago...less full time retail traders...more part-time retail traders with another job. Besides, we all know what happens to a person that attempts to stare at their screens all day...they'll become a zombie by end of week due to the lack of sleep, lack of exercise...resulting in randomly pushing buy/sell orders after easily getting confused by 1 tick in the DOM or 1 interval on their charts...crazy emotional swings, mood swings and then they can't figure out why they can't get an erection when there's a hottie lying next to them in bed...in the nude.
Yet, those that work as professional traders at an institutional trading firm...they are the ones that can come close to staring at the screens all day althought they really only work 8 - 10 hours per day plus a mandatory 1 hour lunch break.
wrbtrader
How do you program your algo to stop you out? Can it tell the difference between fake out spike vs. a real move? Are you telling me that flash crashes are unemotional responses? Can someone give me an example of an algo specifically designed to compete with a manual day trader?These traders are essentially bringing a knife to a gun fight as they are competing against algorithms and machines that can analyze way more data and execute trades in an unemotional, consistent manner.
How do you program your algo to stop you out? Can it tell the difference between fake out spike vs. a real move? Are you telling me that flash crashes are unemotional responses? Can someone give me an example of an algo specifically designed to compete with a manual day trader?
Exactly, that's my point. How do I rationally code my system to take this kind of situational awareness into account? It boils down to something like - if price exceeds 3 times ATR, get out. That's a very "emotional" exit even if it is the correct thing to do based on your backtesting. Day Traders should try to spot these kind of situations.There is no general rules as quality positions behave differently to something speccy or something too pricey.
Actually, if you're not automated...you do not need to "stare at the screen all day".
In fact, if you see people say they "stare at the screen all day"...they aren't just talking about trading. They are talking about learning, studying, hanging out online at social media trading sites.
The last newbie that said they stare at their "screen all day" and worried about getting burnt out...
After questioning him further...I discover he actually only traded 2 hours per day, 1 hour surfing Elitetrader.com and ForexFactory.com, 1 hour reading articles online about the financial markets at CNBC.com & Bloomberg.com, 1 hour of lunch and then heading off to his part-time job for 3 - 4 hours of work.
That's the typical schedule of those that stare at their "screens all day".
Yet, reality is that if you're efficient in your trading...you really only need to put in about 2 - 3 hours per day of trading even if you're not automated. Therefore, those that stare at their screens all day are actually doing other things not related to actual trading via the example of one particular trader.
Think about that statement very carefully...stare at the screens all day. Everybody has to eat and then go to the toilet and later sleep. Just not possible to stare at the screens all day. Its a statement often misused by us traders to validate (merit) traversing into automated trading.
Today's trading environment much different then that 20 years ago...less full time retail traders...more part-time retail traders with another job. Besides, we all know what happens to a person that attempts to stare at their screens all day...they'll become a zombie by end of week due to the lack of sleep, lack of exercise...resulting in randomly pushing buy/sell orders after easily getting confused by 1 tick in the DOM or 1 interval on their charts...crazy emotional swings, mood swings and then they can't figure out why they can't get an erection when there's a hottie lying next to them in bed...in the nude.
Yet, those that work as professional traders at an institutional trading firm...they are the ones that can come close to staring at the screens all day althought they really only work 8 - 10 hours per day plus a mandatory 1 hour lunch break.
wrbtrader
How do you program your algo to stop you out?
To expand on my comment, there are those that come to day trading thinking they can get good at reading charts, order flow or whatever and that will be the key to profits. Of course this requires a lot of screen time because they do not have the ability to quantity and test their ideas without actual paper trading and analyzing the results. These traders are essentially bringing a knife to a gun fight as they are competing against algorithms and machines that can analyze way more data and execute trades in an unemotional, consistent manner. Note that I am talking about day trading which the OP is doing. With swing and longer term trading, automation is not as important. One has to ask themselves what is their competitive advantage. As you mentioned, there are those that are successful without automation and that is great for them. The OP is clearly not in that category based on his postings.