Quote from taowave:
Can someone from the purely discretionairy camp who does ZERO backtesting please tell me what it is they do or look at before putting on a trade???
I am a derivatives trader who only looks at backtests to get the distribution of prices,MAE and MFE.Not concerned with anything past that
I would love to be enlightened...This is a very interesting debate
I don't do any backtesting in the manner that you mean it. Not that I don't see the value for some. I'm not a "system" trader in the manner that you mean it either.
I've described the manner of my trading here before, so I'm not going to go back through that. But let's leave it at this....when I make a trade, I make it for some type of reason. The reason could be technical, although I rarely ever act on technical aspects alone. I want something else there...some type of catalyst. It could be news, it could be ignoring some type of news that it should not have ignored. The could be some type of fundamental reason, or there could be a move starting to take place in an important market sector that would have a big impact on the general market (I trade the ES).
Once there is a reason, I'll try to stick with the trade until the reason fails to work, or something else occurs that compels me to look at something besides that particular reason. At that point I get out. If I put the trade on for a reason, and it does not move, I get out. When I expect something that doesn't materialize in a reasonable period, I get out. In fact these days, at the low commissions that are available to all traders, it's hard to imagine a reason not to terminate a position that is doing otherwise than what you expected.
I trade with a stop. Not a stop based on technicals. Simply a stop that is the maximum I'm willing to lose. It's a fail-safe point. I don't actually place the stop unless we get somewhat close to the area in question. Usually my stops in the ES are 10-20 points. In other words, I take a position based on whatever my reason is, then I sit back and observe how the market trades, how it reacts. If it trades in a manner other than what I expected, I will probably get out and go back to the drawing board.
I think it is a major mistake not to have some type of stop system. I don't care how your backtesting comes out. For instance, you could have had a system that got you long just before the October 1987 Crash (or any of the other October Massacres that have taken place in my trading life). When the day arrive that the market went down 20% with you sitting there because your backtesting results had never seen a day of that type, you would have blown your account out (as some of my friends did). Believe me, I could go through "unexpected events" that have taken place in nearly every market where those without stop points have been killed. Gold and silver, bonds, etc etc. Those "unexpected" days happen when no one expects them (by definition), and then no one believes them. And when they have gone a certain "distance", people start to fade them because it always worked before, and end up getting caught in the disaster. Think about it. It makes no difference if a stop reduces your results somewhat...you can use what I use...a disaster type of stop (which you define), which allows you to survive and trade another day.
By the way, I'm not suggesting that anyone trade the way I trade. I'm a discretionary trader. I have decades of experience on which to form an opinion (not that it will necessarily be right). I'm not against "systems"...they just aren't my cup of tea. What always made sense to me was to THINK about the existing situation, and what you think may happen next.
OldTrader