GCC
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I think you are asking the wrong questions. Of far greater importance is knowing oneself and deciding whether you are pyschologically better suited to day, swing or position trading. Many, many people are wholly unsuited to day trading. You only have to look at wash-out rates in day trading after 6 months -only 10% survive, let alone turn in a profit. It has a habit of attracting the most impulsive, least-disciplined, get-rich-quick individuals on the planet. If you are any of those, stay away from day-trading.
No I am not asking the wrong question. Go read my previous posts in the thread and you'll realise you are not the first one to accuse me asking the wrong question, and you can also find my reply to such claim. More importantly, you may also find that I do both intraday and swing in two different accounts.
However, thanks for the following advice, it is helpful to many traders:
Assuming you have been trading multiple time frames for a while, then have a look at your trading log. Which are you better at? What are you performance stats? What is the average gain per trade in various styles? How long were you in the trades for? Where have the worst losses been? Analysing these will give you the answer to as to what time period, if any, to specialise in.
The following is more interesting:
I tend to use day trading to cover living expenses and swing/positon trading to increase equity. The relative profits of each depend on your skill. There is no doubt, however, that the hourly pay rate of day trading is much lower than other time periods -it feels more like a job.
I believe this is the right approach is professional trading. The money should be divided into two kinds: 1) the bread and butter money, the essential money for covering expense, and 2) the money for growth of your account. John Carter has mentioned this concept in his book Mastering the Trade.
And back to Gogol:
I think I know what you mean....I had similar problem. Dont worry of the stop outs (if you have daily loss limit set)..just look at your winning trades and see - Did you take you profits too early ? do you see the trend moving in you faour even after you exited the trade. This is very important because. 1 you will be trading less trades when you stick with your winners. Just scale out after a certain target is reached. I know its harder than said but its a key to improve your win/loss ratio.
Also, i am sure you mange your stops actively - as in when the move is in your favour - you move your stops slowly - this reduces your expouser per trade.
Not sure if risk-reward ratio is the answer to his problem, because it depends on what system you are trading. Some systems has a very poor RR ratio yet it is profitable. Scalping, for example! It also depends on the nature of the market. Say, crude oil is very different from AUD/NZD, and the way to trade them is very different.
Instead of giving him advice on the rules of his system, I will simply suggest him to trade with smallest lots possible. Try to fiddle around with your system with money you don't care (NEVER trade with sacred money!). As time goes on, he will come up with a system that works for HIM. I suggest this because everyone's system is different from others and one MUST decide his own way of trading.
For example, I am a bottom/top catcher, and I use bigger stop loss and smaller take profit. Yet I am profitable. Why?
1) I know what I am doing. This system is developed by myself and I know what the odds are.
2) Money management. I never go higher than 10:1 leverage in total. (with 1 quid per point)
3) Psychology. I have learnt not to be panic if the trade draws back or profit "appears and disappears" before hitting target.
So, my advice is: go read a lot of systems and find those which appeal to you, try them out with a real account but with very small lots, feel free to modify it in whatever ways you desire, and finally, always always prevent using high leverage! (10:1, at least for beginners)
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