Naive, no, because you are posing questions and seeking answers to questions.Quote from sportmatt37:
so cheese, at the risk of being naive, what do you think is the best way to trade the futures?

Quote from Cheese:
Naive, no, because you are posing questions and seeking answers to questions.
I am always recommending a whole day approach to take money from the market daily. This means day trading. For this I suggest an index futures market. You are already looking at YM. Next you will see the gyrations that characterize the DOW day on day. You need to utilize these as profit makers.
So the aim is simple: to sell into the top of each downmove and buy into the bottom of each upmove. Very obvious you will think. And you will think, easier said than done: yes, of course. But if you start your study, analysis and preparation there, it is where you can tap into the market's cornucopia.
If you are not already doing so, you need to investigate the gyrations in various timeframes (5min, 10 min & half hour) and also, if you have the facilities, in different sizes of tick, range and volume bars.
You cannot make a fortune without starting out on your journey and without setting course in the direction where it can be found.
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Quote from bolter:
5Pillars,
Thanks for throwing out this bracketing concept. I was having this very discussion with someone last week so your posting is quite fortuitous.
I'm not a TradeMaven user so can you clarify something for me please. The Sli orders are obviously Stop Limit orders for entering positions, but L orders on the other side are Limit orders for taking profit - is this correct?
Thanks,
bolter
Quote from bolter:
5Pillars,
Thanks for throwing out this bracketing concept. I was having this very discussion with someone last week so your posting is quite fortuitous.
I'm not a TradeMaven user so can you clarify something for me please. The Sli orders are obviously Stop Limit orders for entering positions, but L orders on the other side are Limit orders for taking profit - is this correct?
Thanks,
bolter
Quote from fader:
from the screenshot, it looks like this setup will end up triggering limit orders on both sides at the same price... - seems there is a possibility here of taking the other side of your own trade? - in this case, it will cause some sort of churning (aside from legal issues?) - this setup seems more applicable for a market-making type strategy.
i understand, however, that the example was meant to be more of an idea - interesting, but still i don't see anything more than a generalized approach to a high-frequency trading setup; i will take a look at the other thread.