Timmy
white swans need love too
- Joined
- 30 September 2007
- Posts
- 3,457
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- 3
The short answer to these two questions is:
1. Depends on what you are trying to achieve & what you believe is possible.
2. Depends on what the individual trader is capable of applying.
On the first point...if you believed that 30-40% win percentages were the norm for a successful trader, and you accepted this and you could achieve profitability from such stats, via simple application and analysis, then you'd do it right?
But what if someone opened up your eyes to a world of 80-90% win percentages, and monthly winning trades that equate to money in the in the ball park of a moderate sized house deposit?
I like your comparison of the two traders, especially your talk of the second, unknown trader.
Or unknown for a reason?
40% versus 80-90% of winners does not mean a thing, as discussed numerous times.
I also find the post by ASXGorilla interesting, but flawed.
Find me this mute, unknown and maybe then it will be known. Until then, the belief of some magic holy grail is exactly that, a belief.
I also find the post by ASXGorilla interesting, but flawed.
Find me this mute, unknown and maybe then it will be known. Until then, the belief of some magic holy grail is exactly that, a belief.
The bottom line is that for most people and situations we have to keep things simple because complexity doesn't scale as well.
Much much easier than Frank d’s approach?????
Much easier for whom??
The day trader who has to be glued to the screens all day, or the person who wants to look at the market once or twice a week?
My 5 year old can even use it….
So your 5-year should become a pro-trader before you then.
My latest tool…
I have a sneaky suspicion that your cycle bands are a tweak of other peoples intellectual property…
How is Frank's method anymore complicated than using any other pivot point method?
Looks quite similar to hi/ lo systems in multiple time frames to me as well...
Ok, I see your point ASX, but I would say a 'market' is FAR more complex than any human brain can comprehend, makes IT and golf look simple and pale in comparison IMHO.
I've been thinking about this question over the weekend and I think the first thing we (most of us anyway) have to acknowledge is that we are not individuals with superior intellect, capable of devising systems of extraordinary complexity. Nor do most of us have the tools (in terms of information and IT systems) needed in order to implement such complexityPrecisely. All the more reason why exceptional human beings able to apply complexity will outperform. Stands to reason IMO.
FWIW, markets make golf look simple...but IT? Hmmm, with IT it's possible to be right...with markets its only possible to be on the right side of a probability. There in lies the difference, but both are complex IMO.
ASX.G
Names like Larry Williams, Jesse Livermore come to mind as very simple and very successful traders, I would say, these retail guys far more successful than most institutional traders............
Livermore blew up in trading and considered his life a failure in his suicide note.
Williams had a money management problem too and nearly blew up after making a lot of money, or so it goes in one of his books. I respect him more for his simplicity in approaching the markets.
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