Quote from NickelScalper:
A couple of specific questions:
1. How many traders do you estimate are using this method?
I assume that "this method" is what is described below as "General point of clarification". You describe it as a trader decision making tool when d is in a range that shows a trading approach is viable. I do not know how many traders there are out there so I can't guess. Hopefully there are very few.
You bring up two cases for the way you determine d or the use of d: small and in a bogus system. Both methods give bad results for a trader so those traders would not use it longer than their capital lasts. So I conclude all successful traders have methods that give bigger d's and they have non bogus approaches. All of this group is unconsciously doing the calculation that you do.
So the total consciously doing what you do is about none.
2. Are you ready to take the real time trading call challenge?
I took it in the late 1950's. There are public records of my trading results starting when PC's and web sites were invented. On occassion third parties have been given records (31 pages of T&S annotated) for an exit on a trade of 100,000 shares in the 30 dollar range). All involved understood that when a stock was reaching new highs that a porfit was occurring. I have been cited by the SEC many times. Their records may be available to you. I was never cited for losing capital.
Since the rates are changing today, I anticipated your typing and posted a trading call of four trades with a bracket entry. The trades are coming up between 2:08 and 3:15 market time.
Sorry there are no d's there. Entry at a price that market comes to (bracket), reverses (use DOM extreme), market exit (use 3:15 as time).
General point of clarification:
Any system of directional trading must be capable of determining a sufficiently large (positive or negative) d, which is the difference between present price and a price to be marketable in the near future. The value of d is generated by the system in real time, and then the trader decides whether or not that d is of sufficient size to warrant a trade. If a system is incapable of generating a large enough d, or if it gives a wrong d too often, the system is bogus.
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