Quote from TheBlackHand:
Yeah right. Ok then.
BTW, when you tried to answer the guy who was getting slippage on CL and you advised him to go to a lower time frame...
Well the correct answer you should have given him was of course to use a STOP LIMIT order. It had NOTHING to do with the CHART, but EVERYTHING to do with TRADING. You really should have known that given you claim to trade CL and make 6 figs a year doing so (unimpressive anyway)
Going to another time frame would have been a whole different system and required a whole bunch of other stuff you probably dont get yet.
Only a trader would have known that. To someone who is in the market every day, that would have been obvious. I thought I'd give you or the other TA followers some time to see if they could answer that for them selves. Alas, no. None of the TA gurus here know anything of the real trading world.
Good luck with your paper trading dear. You'll get there one day.

Quote from hoodooman:
DATE MKOP T= W/L WIN%
8-2 UP 1.5 27/3 90%
8-3 UP 1.5 18/1 95%
8-6 DWN 1.0 18/1 95%
8-7 UP 1.5 35/8 81%
8-8 DWN 1.5 47/1 98%
8-9 DWN 1.0 24/2 92%
8-10 DWN 1.0 25/1 96%
8-13 DWN 2.0 33/0 100%
8-14 UP 2.0 37/1 97%
8-15 DWN 2.0 34/1 97%
8-16 UP 2.0 35/2 94%
8-17 UP 1.0 19/0 100%
8-20 DWN 2.0 24/3 89%
8-21 UP 1.5 18/0 100%
Quote from kingjelly:
Wow.... do you even know how a stop limit works??? If you set it to only accept only a tick or two of slippage it will skip over you and never fill... if it quickly comes back down and does fill you then the breakout will likely fail and your stuck...'in theory' yes it does solve the problem..in practice...not so much
Quote from NoDoji:
I was going to reply directly, but you answered it perfectly. I've never used a stop limit in CL for that exact reason. My worst slippage in CL was a very innocuous-looking ascending triangle breakout, slipped 21 ticks, but still got a fine profit on it. Slippage like that means, "Longs, try and catch me; shorts, you're toast!"
Quote from kingjelly:
Wow.... do you even know how a stop limit works??? If you set it to only accept only a tick or two of slippage it will skip over you and never fill... if it quickly comes back down and does fill you then the breakout will likely fail and your stuck...'in theory' yes it does solve the problem..in practice...not so much
Quote from logic_man:
I've only been trading CL for about 4 months now, but I've never had a stop limit order fail and it's basically the only type of order I use. I also submit my orders far in advance of the actual trade, as much as possible, so I probably have some priority among the limit orders.
Also, I adhere to the idea that there is always another trade coming down the pike, I just don't know the exact time of its arrival. Missing any single trade, while it can suck, just isn't a big deal when I forecast that I will make hundreds of trades over the coming year. If I miss out on a dozen of them or so, I can deal with that.
It does move quickly when it wants to, though.