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Interesting part of THs post in the Phoenix thread.
When should one stop simming and start on live in your opinion? (not directed only at TH btw)
If you have been simming, with good results, when does that point come you should choose to go live? 100 trades? 1000? 10000?
Interested to hear thoughts, as I pretty much have no idea tbh, I feel I should just keep simming until I feel absolutely certain and 100% confident I can be profitable? Even though my stats aren't that bad and I have done well on well over 100+ trades
No time like the present. Your never 100% confident with trading, the markets always change, your just taking a punt in the end, a punt that your 'edge' will remain or that you are adapting your edge. When markets change, you have unprofitable periods sometimes, until your upto date with the markets again and on the same wave-length.
Just MO.
Hmm yeah I guess. Its irritating me, because I am doing quite well on my sim accounts, but as soon as I try a live trade, it turns to ****, I always seem to get in too early and take profit too quick, because I must be too fearful or something, so I then go back to simming rather than milking it and losing too much real stuff, but when I go back to sim I do well again
When should one stop simming and start on live in your opinion? (not directed only at TH btw)
If you have been simming, with good results, when does that point come you should choose to go live? 100 trades? 1000? 10000?
Interested to hear thoughts, as I pretty much have no idea tbh, I feel I should just keep simming until I feel absolutely certain and 100% confident I can be profitable? Even though my stats aren't that bad and I have done well on well over 100+ trades
Go ya hardestMay I offer my humble drunken opinion? I believe its two fold
Its a matter of steps, correct steps. In backtesting/simming there is a lot more going on than just learning how to trade patterns. It enables you to develop in a non-threatening way other market skills. Have a look at the last post off the madman thread. Thats pure inexperience - nothing but time will cure that waffle.
Hmm yeah I guess. Its irritating me, because I am doing quite well on my sim accounts, but as soon as I try a live trade, it turns to ****, I always seem to get in too early and take profit too quick, because I must be too fearful or something, so I then go back to simming rather than milking it and losing too much real stuff, but when I go back to sim I do well again
As I'm in no state to be handing out advise but I will 2 more things,
1 Harden the **** up, its meant to hurt.
2. http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/2010/01/decision-making-in-trading-how.html
As I'm in no state to be handing out advise but I will 2 more things,
1 Harden the **** up, its meant to hurt.
2. http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/2010/01/decision-making-in-trading-how.html
Sam your the punter thats a wins on a sim but crap live. You tell us why?
If I knew why, would I be crap on live? I'm thinking that I chase the market because I'm impatient, that may be my problem, but who knows? How does one work on such a problem? Sim till they are blue in the face? I have been "practicing under realistic conditions"?
yep I've blown some $'s or three. But during that time I could see mostly improvement. The biggest gains came during two periods, 1st was when I got over all the TA gumph and started to practise correctly MY ideas on sim and got results. The second was a true "Ahrrha moment" that may be in a book one dayWhy do you KNOW you are profitable TH? Did you sim for years on end, whilst blowing up multiple accounts? Genuinely interested, not havin a go
How realistic is this? Its certainly not deliberative practise.If I knew why, would I be crap on live? I'm thinking that I chase the market because I'm impatient, that may be my problem, but who knows? How does one work on such a problem? Sim till they are blue in the face? I have been "practicing under realistic conditions"?
Perhaps I just need more, this is my point, when does the time come you think you should go live.
yep I've blown some $'s or three. But during that time I could see mostly improvement. The biggest gains came during two periods, 1st was when I got over all the TA gumph and started to practise correctly MY ideas on sim and got results. The second was a true "Ahrrha moment" that may be in a book one day:
How realistic is this? Its certainly not deliberative practise.
Cheers for the um....help.
What are you working on in your trading? How will you be working on it? How will you know whether or not you're successful?
Oh sorry you wanted me to help YOU. That will be possible with my private tuition after he book.
In the mean time try answering these questions every morning for the next month.
http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/2010/01/from-trading-goals-to-trading.html
It wouldn't be helping just ME. It's a forumMight actually get some quality posts on here for once, but nevermind.
Cheers for the link
The ones that do know what it takes(really know, not just think they know), are too busy doing it to help too much, its like goldmines, not going to scream and shout when you find it I guess. … It wouldn't be helping just ME. It's a forum Might actually get some quality posts on here for once, but nevermind.
Harden the stars up, wow great, is that all it takes! Cheers!
Yes thats a great post, but thats it. Doesn't help in any way whatsoever as far as I'm concerned, hes just pointing the usual stuff out, adding the lame "its like XYZ" stories and thats it. How does that help anyone? So you say " OK I will make sure I can trade under pressure"? Yeah BS. Or "OK I will make sure I look at the whole picture to come to a reasonable hypothesis next time". Sure you will.
If I knew why, would I be crap on live? I'm thinking that I chase the market because I'm impatient, that may be my problem, but who knows? How does one work on such a problem? Sim till they are blue in the face? I have been "practicing under realistic conditions"?
Perhaps I just need more, this is my point, when does the time come you think you should go live.
That is why practice under realistic conditions, eventually with money on the line, is crucial to the developing trader: We learn to perform only by repeatedly facing the pressures of risk, reward, gain, and loss.
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