Maybe the play is not to be buying breakouts
The play was never to buy breakouts or at the very least the initial breakout.
That has always been something only novice traders and degenerate gamblers like to do.
Maybe the play is not to be buying breakouts
Funny, think or swim used to be one of my customers... sometimes I forget how this shit works.. I was asking my boss who the fuck orders came from and he just named off every fucking broker there isnow to figure out how to set up a scan fir it on think it swim.
We’ll that’s a little bit of a freaking insult. It’s ok though, I’ve got a thick skin .The play was never to buy breakouts or at the very least the initial breakout.
That has always been something only novice traders and degenerate gamblers like to do.
We’ll that’s a little bit of a freaking insult. It’s ok though, I’ve got a thick skin .
because in this kind of market environment , more breakouts turn into fake outs.
Well how about millennial traders then? (Sheesh! I had to come up with something to describe them.)
now you’re calling me smart money. That’s better LOL.
milennial traders haven’t experienced what we old folks like me have. So they are naive to the ugly possibilities of what could happen
That is why popular strategies don't last long.
Smart money are cunning. They know how to adapt and strike where it hurts most.
That is exactly one of the strategies I use for +30 years now.
I have been trading since the age of 15. Nothing to be impressed about. I have been lucky to have had parents that stimulate my interests on a young age and had the financial backbone to get me started. If I had 'normal' parents, I do not think I would have been so far, so fast.You've traded the same strategy since age 18 or earlier (based on your stated age)? Genuinely impressed if true.
I have been trading since the age of 15. Nothing to be impressed about. I have been lucky to have had parents that stimulate my interests on a young age and had the financial backbone to get me started. If I had 'normal' parents, I do not think I would have been so far, so fast.
Darn, that is really bad luck. My first book He bought me was the book from Stan Weinstein and I was hooked. Four stages, weekly charts, 11 ma period. Next book was something from William o neil. I put those two together, next piece of big influence was positionsizing and of I went.Thanks for expositing, interesting to start in earnest that early.
I was "sort of interested in stocks" at that age but really had no clue what I was doing, much less anything about trading. In comparison my parents really didn't know anything either or particularly encouraged it beyond "that's great son", and my father buying me a very dry book explaining how to walk to the bank office to buy stocks, with complete lack of discussion of any strategy.
Probably the only two book you need.Darn, that is really bad luck. My first book He bought me was the book from Stan Weinstein and I was hooked. Four stages, weekly charts, 11 ma period. Next book was something from William o neil. I put those two together, next piece of big influence was positionsizing and of I went.