1 long scratch. Another day where a bunch were pulled on news.
Quote from Worldcrusher:
I have been following this thread for some time and just wanted to post a few things I have discovered that might help others:
1.) By using envelopes no less than .5, I have found that the number of my profitable opening orders has gone from 54% to 69% and my average daily production doubled from an average of 9 points to 18 points per day. These settings result in 0-4 fills per trade day, or an average of 1.5 fills per trade day.
2.) In conjunction with the .5 envelope, I also ensure at least a .20 difference between my order and the stocks last trade. I verify that all buy orders are below the last and all sell orders are above it. I avoid any stocks with earnings announcements within the current 2-3 days as well any stock with significant news.
3.) On this thread I have read repeatedly that traders closed out their orders too quickly. I avoid this because as soon as I get filled, I put a stop .10 below my entry for buys and above my entries for shorts. If the stock moves against me, I am obviously stopped out. If it moves favorably, I then manually ratchet up the stop, creating a "manual" trailing stop of roughly .05 or hiding just below major/minor lines of support or resistance. This method works well because if I am filled with multiple orders within a narrow timeframe, I can put on a stop and not worry about them going against me and incurring massive losses while I am attending to another stock (a problem I used to have). I would not trade openings without using stops, but that is just me.
4.) I struggled with opening trades while in Bright bootcamp. So when I returned to my remote trading home office, I took a break from openings. A few months later, I started trading them again but limited the share sizes to 100 shares. My thought was that they had to earn my trust. I kept them like that for almost a month and then went to 200 shares for awhile. Next week I will jump to 400 shares and so on. My point is to simply get openings down before jumping into trading large lot sizes.
I wish you all continued success in your trading.
Daryl