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I'm finding that with the breakout ones. I've narrowed it down to 3 main setups for me. I've been deceived many times with false breakouts and have wised up to this a little.
If I get time ill post a few charts explaining what I mean.
Interested to hear TH thoughts also.
How did you go last night?
didn't take a trade. was looking for the long and the set up was there but I was a little gun shy so passed on it. Didn't feel it was a slam dunk at the time. As tech said a lot of noise last night. nothing wrong with sitting my hands
...
Are there any occasions when obvious break out trades should be taken or do you find the best 'break out' trades come from identifying the chance they will break BEFORE they do and getting on them BEFORE HAND.
I meant good decision not to place any trades in a choppy market last night if it didn't look like there was much there.
Better to take fewer good setups than looking to make a setup out of everything.
Another classic newbie mistake: Thinking you know what is going to happen next.
" ... the set up was there but I was a little gun shy so passed on it. .... nothing wrong with sitting on my hands
" Very good decision."
If you see your setup and don't take it. That is a big trading mistake. It is most definitely a bad decision and wrong. Now that you see the trade would have been a loser you convince yourself that you know what's going to happen next. You think you can spot the setups that will and wont work out. I bet you can't.
Obviously "your" setup isn't yours or more likely you don't have the confidence to take "your" setup. If there was something about that setup that you didn't like then make it a part of the guidelines for a perfect setup. You mentioned a lot of noise. It might be that your setup works best in situations with low volatility. Find out (research) and if that's right you have learned an important confirmation filter. Add it to your setup checklist.
You won't get any better relying on your emotional responses. Search for the facts and base your decisions on them.
I get the impression (especially from you TH) and also reading the FX thread(s) that most typical 'break out' trades simply don't work often enough to be +EV. Would you agree with this comment? TH you obviously have the most experience with this and I feel like whenever an obvious break out trade is apparent you feel its a 'retail sucker play' and it will just get reversed pretty quickly.
I find the best set ups for me are the ones where I fade the highs/lows (because of various factors/reasons) or I identify some good continuation patterns and am able to jump on board.
Are there any occasions when obvious break out trades should be taken or do you find the best 'break out' trades come from identifying the chance they will break BEFORE they do and getting on them BEFORE HAND.
Yes, successful break out trades are the least common set up in futures markets. I think newbies struggle with this when they come from a stock picking back ground and expect Index futures to act the same way. When you trade stocks you look for momentum setups and play the carry on from that momentum. Indexes rarely work the same way. That is because of the constituents that make up the Index. To have a true break you basically need at least 50% of the constituents to be behaving as break outs and then going on with it. Its very rare to have that setup.
You do get very big pushes in directions but my guess (I'll get to this later) is that 80% of the time you will have some reversion back to the mean after a certain time. That is because even if the strong stocks that keep going the weaker ones will start to fail and pull the index back robbing the overall index of momentum.
So do I. in part because you can have a stop that is very/relatively tight and more importantly you get so many more setups. A small edge repeated 20 times a day is much better than one that appears once a week.
As to my 80% chance of a break failing I have some time ago tested the times when you have a large range day that starts at one end and ends at the other. There usually is only 2 or 3 per month. If that is your setup and you only win 50% of them thats going to leave you with either not much to do all month or getting cut to bits playing a setup that hardly ever turns up.
With that said it obviously can make a huge advantage if you can recognise when to play that way. To catch a 2% move in an index or greater and hang on with some size can make the diff between long term success or failure. Especially if instead of riding it you fight it all the way and smash your account.
So with intraday this is really the essence of long term success. Learning to read what "type" of market we have and how long that will stick. Whenever I hear good traders talk about their upcoming trades or their approach to the day I rarely hear them talking specific TA "patterns"...... they talk in themes.
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