Adamus
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I have tried twice before to make it with mechanical systems - once in 1992 and once again in 1998, and now I'm going to give it another go, because the bug never left me.
I've been earning a living as a software developer and I've been playing with Tradestation a lot. My plan is simple: I have £40K risk capital and £15K to live off and the goal is to start trading at the latest at the beginning of June and to be profitable enough to withdraw £1500 per month from then on for subsistence.
Hopefully my career will last a bit longer than June.
I've already done a lot of research and testing - it covers futures and forex – about 25 markets with high liquidity – all on a daily time frame.
I concentrate on break-out algorithms, with medium to high frequency trades – at least 10 per annum per market.
I find set-ups in TradeStation that look good, and then export the trade history into my own risk analysis program to have a look at its behaviour in different markets, with equity curves, correlations, performance stats etc. Most of the set-ups I find are rubbish – but every now and then I find one I think will work.
I've tried several times in the last couple of years to kick off this trading project but until now it has always fallen down because of outside factors in my life taking over. If anyone reading this is at all like me, you'll know that working on your own without outside input leads to going off on tangents. I hope that running a journal here will draw some kind of commentary from other people that will sharpen my focus when things start to go off the rails.
I aim to write a journal entry everyday - so between now and June my entries will be all about the research and preparation I'm doing – but I hope I'll do some exploratory trading within a month or so because I need to test the markets to work out how much slippage I'll be paying, which is probably the most important factor that can make or break the algorithms I come up with.
So here goes. My theory is, I'll get focus and direction from writing here to make public what I do everyday. You want to comment? Be my guest.
I've been earning a living as a software developer and I've been playing with Tradestation a lot. My plan is simple: I have £40K risk capital and £15K to live off and the goal is to start trading at the latest at the beginning of June and to be profitable enough to withdraw £1500 per month from then on for subsistence.
Hopefully my career will last a bit longer than June.
I've already done a lot of research and testing - it covers futures and forex – about 25 markets with high liquidity – all on a daily time frame.
I concentrate on break-out algorithms, with medium to high frequency trades – at least 10 per annum per market.
I find set-ups in TradeStation that look good, and then export the trade history into my own risk analysis program to have a look at its behaviour in different markets, with equity curves, correlations, performance stats etc. Most of the set-ups I find are rubbish – but every now and then I find one I think will work.
I've tried several times in the last couple of years to kick off this trading project but until now it has always fallen down because of outside factors in my life taking over. If anyone reading this is at all like me, you'll know that working on your own without outside input leads to going off on tangents. I hope that running a journal here will draw some kind of commentary from other people that will sharpen my focus when things start to go off the rails.
I aim to write a journal entry everyday - so between now and June my entries will be all about the research and preparation I'm doing – but I hope I'll do some exploratory trading within a month or so because I need to test the markets to work out how much slippage I'll be paying, which is probably the most important factor that can make or break the algorithms I come up with.
So here goes. My theory is, I'll get focus and direction from writing here to make public what I do everyday. You want to comment? Be my guest.
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