Hi,
I have a few questions that would be great to get some input on. I'm not sure if they are more suited for the beginners forum, but it would be great if the answers are oriented more towards emini futues. I appologise if this is the wrong area for posting this.
Anyways, on to the questions!
The way I see trading is that you need to have a good system that works out when the market conditions are in your favour. I dont think many would disagree, although the coin toss method has been proven to work, providing that you have a solid exit strategy. Onto that later...
Firstly, what raw data is available to the individual futures trader that provides you with the edge that you use for trading? I imagine that volume, DOM, Time/Sales data make up most of the info that people use, but it would be really interesting to see understand how people combine this data to come to a trading decision.
If you use resistance/support levels, what do you think makes up that resistance/support.
Basic trends are used by a lot of people. can this be quantified into resistance over time for use in an algo to help work out bias? Obviously a basic trend line will tell us this visually. If we ranked this, could we work out when it was enough of a market bias given other market conditions were acceptable for entry and exit?
When we trade, discretion must play a part at the time we make the decision to pull the trigger, unless using a fully automated system. Do you experience confidence when entering a trade? Can we measure this to see whether or not this is our brains way of measuring bias in a trade? If we can, should position sizing be adjusted accordingly.
How can we distinguish between confidence and hopefullness? It may sound like a silly thing to say, but personally I when trading a live, I find this difficult. When paper trading, it feels obvious. Is this just my greed taking over? (probably, I think!)
Should stops also be adjusted depending on confidence in a trend? I'm sure the more weathered traders would do this automatically, But it would be nice to know whether a fixed stop strategy is actually better, or if you should use discretion alteast when entering. From what I have read, once in a trade it is difficult to use good judgement place stops because of the nature of taking a profit! (a nice way of calling us traders greedy! I appologise to those with good judgement.)
How do market orders contribute to bias, and is the squawk effective at measuring this to add to market bias?
Last of all, and I do appologise for the length of this post -
If it is statistically improbable to make money trading in the long term, what sample size of trades would give a good idea of whether or not one would be likely to be successful at trading?
Thank you for reading my scribbles. I'm not so good at posting on forums. I would appreciate any answers, whether opinion or fact. And I do appologise if I bored you senseless. I would also like to thank you all for your contributions on this forum, it has been riviting reading.
Cheers,
Steve