Re: Trading / Daytrading for a living
It is possible to think about this more clearly. Suppose your method M picks some profitable moves, but sometimes gets it wrong. Suppose further that if the day after a trading signal the market has moved contrariwise by X%, then it is more profitable to close your position regardless what M says. Then why not replace M by M', the same method but with the rule concerning the movement since yesterday factored in?
This produce the same behaviour in the case of a reversal, while making the method stronger overall. Under the "indicator plus stop-loss" system you were entering positions in circumstaces where, if you had entered the same position the day before, you'd be exiting it now!
cheers,
Chemist
Frink,professor_frink said:The problem with that chemist, is I know any indicator I use is not trustworthy, most won't even get it right 50% of the time, but they will catch the big move when it comes. They will also catch the tops of smaller moves. That's why appropriately placed stop losses and position sizing(staking plans) are essential. You need to stay in the game long enough for your methods expectancy to play out.
It is possible to think about this more clearly. Suppose your method M picks some profitable moves, but sometimes gets it wrong. Suppose further that if the day after a trading signal the market has moved contrariwise by X%, then it is more profitable to close your position regardless what M says. Then why not replace M by M', the same method but with the rule concerning the movement since yesterday factored in?
This produce the same behaviour in the case of a reversal, while making the method stronger overall. Under the "indicator plus stop-loss" system you were entering positions in circumstaces where, if you had entered the same position the day before, you'd be exiting it now!
cheers,
Chemist