Should we only stay in the trade for the first candle?
Should we only stay in the trade for the first candle?
Another loser today - real cash, not pennies.
Others have referred to the "FMT effect" - that is - the FMT fires a signal, say a Buy - and for a short period - e.g., the first 15 minutes - the trade goes in the correct direction.
Then, it turns against us. Yes, sometimes it eventually turns around and recovers. But
more often than not (?), once it goes bad, it stays bad until exit.
Here's the question - prior to releasing the FMT for sale, did Mark plotted the actual time that the signal called, lasts? Has he kept track of this since its release?
If not, can he / will he look back at actual trades - and reveal for example, that 70% of the time, the trade is successful but only in the first 15 minutes, but fails after that? If this is true, we have a potentially significant opportunity to reshape this EA - and avoid lots of losses - especially recently.
It would seem that the "breakout" orientation of this system mandates that it NOT depended upon unrelated factors to eventually turn the trade around from a loser to a winner. That is, if we hang in long enough, something will eventually go our way, whatever it is, whatever the cause, and fix a long trade. As opposed to knowing the "useful life" of the breakout call of the FMT.
My opinions - just my opinions (based upon my experience):
1. I would much rather stay in a trade for a shorter period of time and have a greater and more assured win rate, than stay in longer, incur more significant draw downs, etc. in the hopes that SOME trades may turn around and become profitable and/or land me a larger win now and then.
2. Steady wins (albeit potentially smaller) & little drawdowns make for a more comfortable ride - especially when you are trading for a living - and using meaningful amounts of money. If I am only trading a few pennies here and there, as sort of a hobby, it will cause me to take greater risks - and create a less-than-realistic mindset - and tolerate poor performance that I should otherwise never tolerate.
3. If however, I am "trading for a living" - the stakes and my mindset must be different.
Has anyone studied this in detail? Are there flaws in my thinking? Any other thoughts on this? Has this already been covered in this forum?
Time for an evaluation and guidance? Or do we wait it out? Any advice?