Quote from The Oracle:
anyway ZT..no matter what market u trade..there is one OBVIOUS thing that you must know to control ur risk..and make some good money.
Quote from mekanikal:
Yes poland, bogan gave the right site.
I have read various threads here and there with titles like:
1. The obvious one
2. the charts of deception
3. if you want to fail as a trader, study TA
4. how to trade, full stop.
5. market intelligence

Quote from macattack:
You need to know how much money you have. Then decide what % you want to risk on each trade & be sure to make it a very small percentage. Then you won't panic so much when things go red, & maybe if you're patient things will turn around & go green.
..but as we done an example trade..and TO mentioned that he also opened some more trades..i will show u 2 of the trades opened at very low risk that seem to have paid off nicely 
Quote from Zr1Trader:
That answers my question .
to clarify, when I trade all in all out its only with .25% max risk per trade so it's fine. its not the kind of all in all out with the farm at stake
"To control your risk " ...
Some things i do and maybe some depth of what risks there are for those who overlook some of them.
know when big impact news will hit the tape, know the ATR on various time frames , you have to know liquidity of the instrument on a time and price basis, when is it liquid, when isn't it, when is it volatile , when isn't it, know session hours and maintenance periods, know circuit breaker limits, limit up, limit down, know position limits, know spread size, know your position size and stop loss amount, know that anything can happen at anytime, know your stop can get slipped and blown pretty dang far ,know that broker errors can happen, know that platform errors can happen, know if your orders are held at the exchange or on your computer, know all order types and what their implications are of each one, know margin requirements , Know that gaps can, will and do happen. Know what you do if a nuke goes off tomorrow in NY city at 10 am. Know your broker will answer by the 3rd ring. Know that the dow can lose and make 700+ points in a few minutes. So many risks in this business.
Know your risk and manage it accordingly. Thats my contribution to the world for the day . lol
from your post above^^^"use simple language, don't copy, and think for yourself" thats good I like it.

Quote from bogan22:
http://www.trade2win.com/boards/
search for "The Expert"
Search this forum for TE and NYSE there are other threads here as well.
Poland,
No, the Camron dude is an idiot. But he has one tiny useful bit of information. TE reveals if you follow the threads, but he doesn't give it up easily.
cheers
Bogan22
Quote from mekanikal:
Thanks bogan for the clarification regarding Camron. I want to limit my reading to quality stuff! I did notice some interesting tidbits and he does get verbose.
For e.g. he discussed volume to great lengths and how it is one of the most important component of any transaction. He delves in micro/macro economics, supply & demand etc.
Then he comes back to trading and how volume is important here as well. But the big movers are clever bastards and hide their volume. The volume we see on the chart is mostly market maker noise and the true volume is disguised. That is why volume on a chart is useless. TFF simply stated this fact in one line
He mentions to look for volume in other places like DOM and how different algos will behave and their telltales in the DOM + charts.
Is this the interesting bit you are talking about?
TE is quite clever and hides the important bit in plain sight. Add on noise from other idiots and it gets drowned and difficult to identify!
He also started some private group which unfortunately for me was at a time when I was sleeping
Maybe TFF can start another class![]()

..liking what u are doing is half the battle..right
Quote from bogan22:
Hi MK,
To be honest, I can't remember the reference to Camoron but do remember an extensive discussion on the drunk from downunder, which is what I assumed you are referring to:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/7122490/Bryce-Gilmore-Dynamic-Time-and-Price-Analysis-of-Market-Trends
page 45 on scribid or 6-1 is the only bit of info this guy has to offer.
TE, was funny and verbose, the cranky old fart should chime in again.
Volume. You are picking up different things to myself (fresh eyes I suppose), the lesson with volume that I took away is don't worry about it. There is one particular thread on that forum in which TE extensively discusses what to look for in a trading vehicle. This is what I believe NYSE meant when he posed the original question. Horses.
I get a few PM's asking if I know the magic recipe that TFF bake thier cookies with, sorry I do not. I've never had any contact with any TFF members. But, its a very interesting thought experiment so keep following the threads and ideas will grow. Sometimes members of TFF seem to allude to deeper hidden structures, but I've found it beneficial to just ignore this stuff and concentrate on the simple stuff. There is no magic recipe. Some tidbits I've started playing with on a daily time frame in particular incorporating my perception of straight lines. KISS. Thus far seems quite enlightening and hidden in full view.
I think TE got kicked off the board before the group started. MN was around in those days so he/she may have more info.
cheers
Bogan22

Quote from mekanikal:
Aaah ok that explains the confusion. I was actually referring to a completely different person. I have glanced through Bryce Gillmore and nothing interested me (besides the divergence).
This is what I am talking about -
camron dot com dot au
Two bits that stood out for me were the connectivity between overseas marktes (including how to utilize insider information) and the operation/purpose of different algos (iceberg, skyscrapper, sheepdog, termites).
Maybe TO can analyze it better![]()