- Joined
- 14 December 2010
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I have two conflicting views;
1. I have traded the Australia 200 Cash successfully for 18 months, completing 2000 or so trades. Trading capital is now 15x what I started with and I take a wage out weekly which I can comfortably live on. I have learned many things about how this particular instrument behaves and adapted my trading around its characteristics. Why mess with a good thing?
2. I am starting to occasionally hit liquidity issues which so far have not created too many issues and for which I have strategies that work OK at present. There is no market depth information as the Australia 200 is a synthetic market maker instrument. I think to take my trading to the next level of return I would need to go to real futures, not market maker. The learning curve, however, both excites and daunts me at the moment. The prospect of further automating my trading is very tempting and exciting. Learning the quirks of a yet another new instrument is very daunting.
Nice setup to the short side tonight.
5 min chart.
Entry sell-stop 6564
Initial stop 6571
7 point risk
Price was always going to come down and fill the gap around 6540.
Setup was on a lower high with bearish behavior.
Exit 6534
30 points
Enormous clarity since working on a proper playbook.
There are good setups which repeat themselves.
Huge help knowing exactly what to look for and then executing.
How would you have described "Setup was on a lower high with bearish behavior" in your playbook Pav ?
Big profits will come when:
Therein lies several reasons why I am currently using CFDs.
1. Most of my trading capital can currently safely live in an interest bearing account away from the market maker's account.
Many will think that I suffer from delusions of grandeur but I see no reason why in the near future profit of $100,000 can be made (50 points per week x 2 contracts).
Lol I took out the actual figure that I wrote down first (it wasn't $100,000) because I don't believe the responses would be favourable
Yep all very easy IF you can be consistent. Its the big down days that fluff up the average. Also don't underestimate how hard it is to recognise and actually trade the big days. Its as easy as hell to have a look at the daily range the day after and pull the calculator out and go "boy next time I'll make XXXX" But how many have we had in 6 months and how many have you rode? Bit of a reality check in that number I bet.
I know you aren't the biggest fan of my 2 contract idea. I know you think 'hold them all'. But psychologically, for the short term, I know this is a right stepping stone for me. Better to maximize profit on 1 out of 2 contracts than on 0 out of 1 contract (even if 2/2 is the best possible outcome).
No, No I think its very hard to trade 1 contract, makes every decision an in or out one. That sucks. I'm just not a fan of letting go of the first contract at 1-2 R. (especially the 1 R :bad
If you can control the down side I'm all for sizing up.
Many will think that I suffer from delusions of grandeur but I see no reason why in the near future profit of $100,000 can be made (50 points per week x 2 contracts).
Lol I took out the actual figure that I wrote down first (it wasn't $100,000) because I don't believe the responses would be favourable
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