Rather than add to my previous post, I'll add here instead that the criteria for entry are not negated simply because price doesn't do what's expected. The rules for entry and the rules for management are separate issues since there is no way of knowing exactly what will happen once the entry is triggered. If the trade doesn't go quite as expected, that doesn't mean that exit is appropriate. Some trades take longer to ripen than others. This doesn't mean that one should stay in a trade regardless. But it also doesn't justify exiting out of boredom.
If one's management rules call for an exit, then take the exit. If they don't, then one is deciding not to follow the plan simply because something somewhere else looks better. This is not sound practice. If one has no management rules, then that of course should be addressed
Exactly so. The trading plan delineates every contingency that you can think of, that may threaten your capital. If, your capital is threatened by something that you hadn't thought of, and it's not in your plan...........exit with the loss and re-think your plan.
Exiting as you are bored, think you see a better opportunity elsewhere etc is a breach of dicipline, and the slippery slope to losing your capital.
The skill of course lies in being able to read the market correctly as it unfolds, by use of real time analysis that penetrates far beyond the obvious limitations of textbook TA. It's what Mr Charts calls "micro analysis", I believe. Most of us are unable to do this because it is bloody difficult, but I have every certainty that there are those that can do it with a high degree of consistency, and they're the ones keeping quiet and taking our money, or at least reducing our profits
Two points.
1......If you are purely a "DAYTRADER" then thats fine as far as it goes. However, there are other forms of trading outside the exceedingly high failure rate of daytrading.
2....."micro-analysis", or as defined by Mr Charts, a combination of Level2 & Time & Sales.
Level2 is a scalping tool first and foremost. It does you little if any good for catching bigger moves, unless you dispense with it for a different exit technique.
How can I justify that assertion?
1.....Unless you hold overnight, only very rarely will you have stocks exceed 2% intra-day, that will normally be on news, and the MM have already moved the price prior to retail traders getting in on the open or pre-market
2....Only very rarely will a stock trend intra-day in one direction without ANY pullbacks.
As soon as a pullback is on the cards, Level2 starts showing the changes in orders, if you are trading by Level2, this is an exit.
3.....For scalpers, this is fine, they only want "sure" money, and they will execute 100's possibly 1000's of trades a day, and make good money. Of course you stay in front of the screen all day
4.....When you are scalping, your winners in $$ terms will not exceed your losers by a great amount, so accurate entries are a prerequisite.
5.....If you look at the trade examples posted by Mr Charts, you see a great number that go something like,.......profit $0.34, $0.26, $0.67..........losses, $0.13, $0.04, $0.19
For the scalpers, that is the way it goes, tight stops, fast exits, lots of trades, living on fags,caffeine and whatever.
Level2, for non-daytraders is a complete waste of time.
It provides you with nothing, it is the noise taken to the n'th degree, and serves no purpose.
Needless to say, MM know that there is a population of daytraders trying to beat them at their own GAME..........and they will sucker most of you most of the time.....why?
Because they see their own order flow, and will share their order flow with other MM for their order flow, think they don't?.....Think again.
MM don't lose money.
If they do, they aren't MM for very long.
cheers d998