i trade the ym alot, and i make money consistently, so i am definitly not a new trader, i just didn't know which section to put this under. My question is profit targets. I wanted to know how you guys, from past experiences, use as your initial targets, and more importantly, when you take that target. For example, if your initial target is +5, and your final target is 30+, and you just started scaling in, meaning so far you only have 1 car instead of the 3 you usually take(full size), do you take that first car off emmidiately once you hit you +5 since you don't have your full size on, causing you to potentially miss the bigger move, or do you take your plus 5 after you've scaled in your buy points(so you can scale out)??
Is a +5 initial target too small?
I'll give an idea of how i trade this, maybe i can get some more experienced traders critique this a little.
-With the filters, i don't take my initial target. What i actually do is my first order i enter i expect it to be my homerun trade , so it only has a trailing stop, and then i scale in taking my +5 after my first order is in. So i get a buy trigger at 100, i enter at market with x stop, and then i see if i can get a better fill, and take my +5 from there with same stop as initial target. If i cannot get a better fill, , i actually average up into the trade and take my plus 5 from there.
Against the filters, i enter my first, but if i get to my initial target without trying to get a better fill, im flat, untill i can get a better fill.
The problem is sideways markets, when filters are useless. How do you play this? i tried looking at my past trades, and i can't seem to find a way to play it right. Some trades, i should pretty much look for a home run without even having a initial target, some, i get stopped out completely.
Also, since im on the topic, do you guys even try to scale in, or is everything at market. I know there's two camps on this. One of the reasons i scale in is because im good at scalping.
Looking forward for some comments from some pros...