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I realized over the weekend that my trading for the year has been TERRIBLE. Even though I've been quite profitable with minimal drawdowns... the actual trading has been just awful.
Things I've noticed about my trading up to this point:
I've often been "lost" with no bearing as to potential swings of the market- from being too glued to tiny 50 tick timeframe and not seeing the "bigger" picture. So I will now trade more of the 250 tick swings. Often times that will only be a 10 tick profit target, but sometimes it will be 20 or more.
Loading up on too many contracts. So now I say to you the max position size allowed is 4 contracts.
I have to go for now, but there's more.
Get ready for a new IT7.
Can you help answer these questions from other members on NexusFi?
I like it, sometimes we all need to take a little step back and re-asses what we are doing. I didn't see the thread for a while at et, good to see it continuing. I'm mostly just a lurker here but I'll be lurking.
No...both. The scale-in is done on a bar-by-bar basis, not on a price swing basis (as the forum host had shown recently in an unsuccessful trade sequence). Basically, you want successively higher HLC's (high, low, closes per bar) in a rising price segment or lower ones in a falling price segment to qualify adding. [A "price segment" doesn't have discernible "legs" to it on the same time frame as you're trading it on; therefore, it exists in ranges and trends]
From a money management point of view, you're keeping your draw-down per trade fairly fixed and relatively small while *not* limiting the positive effects of the contract leveraging on the trade, regardless of how long the price segment may turn out to be.
I understood this valuable insight with the exception of this: " [A "price segment" doesn't have discernible "legs" to it on the same time frame as you're trading it on; therefore, it exists in ranges and trends]".
I figured that a "price segment" was simply a HLC bar in whatever time-frame your chart is.