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buy and hold is for folks earning a healthy income elsewhereIn a friendly way I often remind my daughter that buy and hold is for lazy folks that don't know what they're doing--she has a buy and hold approach.
Well this morning she asked me to check in on the performance of her holdings--much to our great surprise she is up almost 6% from 1 January. So today she is making me eat **** sandwiches for lunch
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I'm not going to take anyones side because I do both. My mechanical systems do better maninly because I am a poor discretionary trader by nature. I therefore allocate more funds to mechanical than discertaionary
It would be easier to define discretionary trading as subjective trading and mechanical or rule based as objective trading
Which is better - Discretionary or rules-based trading?
The answer might depend on your understanding & definition of "discretionary" as opposed to "rule-based trading". For me, it’s really simple, because "technical analysis" can be backtested to decide if the rule-based trading has an edge.
What's the definition?
I'll leave the definition of discretionary trading & rule-based trading to the Duc as he nails it in a few words.
Skate.
Now there are many types of discretionary traders. @peter2 would likely classify himself as a discretionary trader.
So @Skate can you see if there is any place for all over the shop such as I who trade on the vibe.@ducati916, I agree, Peter is different from most discretionary traders but I do believe his trading is "subjective" at times. After reading his recent couple of posts it was the first time he involved a money value to reinforce a point. The take-away for me was the loss was due to a series of subjective decisions.
Being subjective
Subjectiveness was the reason why he was extremely hard on himself to the point of self-flagellation. We are all wordsmiths to some degree but a change in his tone & word choices instigated this series of short posts from me today.
But before I finish
I want to make another statement that mechanical or rule-based trading has only two major rules. Those two rules are "precision & confidence". Both are needed to enter & exit a trade. The minor rules will look after themselves. If you’ve been worried about the volatility this week or the uncertainty it brings, it's only natural but "comfort" can be sort knowing a "mechanical system trading" will make the decisions for you "rather than your gut".
Skate.
So @Skate can you see if there is any place for all over the shop such as I who trade on the vibe.
But keep an account and desist if in danger of loss or not enough gain.
Ruthless as you with my baser emotions and Lady Hope.
gg
Good series of posts @Skate.The answer might depend on your understanding & definition of "discretionary" as opposed to "rule-based trading". For me, it’s really simple, because "technical analysis" can be backtested to decide if the rule-based trading has an edge.
I second that,same here.?For me, I honestly don’t trust my own subjective judgement so stay well away from discretionary as I can’t make money from it.
Trading based on fixed rules
From entry to trade management, risk management & finally the exit oversimplified system trading but it's a start.
A discretionary trader always sees something
A discretionary trader is going to look at the market from many different angles using a variety of tools from their "toolbox" trying to form a well-argued opinion. The purpose is obvious. To come to the conclusion for the trade setup. Confirmation bias is one of our worst enemies because we want to see "what we want to see" & convince ourselves that the decision we are going to make is the correct one. But you can take it from me, there is always self-doubt trading this way (discretionary).
Skate.
Nicely put Skate.Tested & proven
Mechanical system trading has a solid basis for all underlying buy & sell signals, that have been tested & hopefully proven to have a trading edge. Mechanical trading does take losses at times & that is to be expected because you are letting your system make all your decisions.
To some degree, we are all discretionary traders
Oftentimes system traders do gradually develop an instinct for trading that helps them to be profitable so I'm not preaching we are all in or out when it comes to the way we trade, it is never black & white as many times there are grey areas. Because of these grey areas we need a "Trading Plan" that overrides a "Trading Strategy". There are times when you might notice something about a trade signal that tells you that you shouldn't be taking the trade, even if your system says that you should. Whether you skip that trade to save money or you alter your system to avoid those trades, that involves discretion.
Mechanical system trading relies on a trading plan (for sure)
I'm just pointing out if you get six buy signals it's okay to isolate one signal when it falls foul of your trading plan.
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Skate.
Nicely put Skate.
I like to look at three pairs of moving averages, a short term, a medium term and a long term. This throws up a list of candidate buys. I list these based on market capitalization: I don't think the market accidentally has say CBA as the top-priced bank.
Then I look at dividends paid: a company that has skimpy, erratic or no dividends sends me an alert (I know there are exceptions).
Next I scan the directors share holdings and their purchases and sales. Directors with no or little "skin in the game" or directors selling off their holdings sets off an alert
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