Did Your 'Edge' Come Easy?

Discussion in 'Trading' started by Chris_Anonymous, Sep 28, 2011.

  1. Eddiefl

    Eddiefl




    No, did not come easy, strange thing is, that my main edge now is something I was trading my first and second year of active trading. I left it cuz i thought it was too simple or there has to be more.

    So I took a long 4-5 years walk around the block and finally came back to it. I added a couple filters and added size and it works great.

    My suggestion is to stick to something very simple, we complicate this thing more than we need to. Focus on money management, trading size. Trade to your emotional level, if too big, you wont be able to pull the trigger every time you need to.

    Also, very important, trade it with real money, even a tiny size. Nothing compares to real live trading with money. What seems doable in paper testing, backtesting or forward testing does not always match up with live-real executions.

    Good luck, your asking the correct questions,

    EF
     
    #31     Sep 28, 2011
  2. Õóåäæ
     
    #32     Sep 28, 2011
  3. aaaaaahah...hahah
     
    #33     Sep 28, 2011
  4. Eddiefl

    Eddiefl




    I think what is funnier is that you have an avg. of 39 posts per week since you signed up here,


    Really?,, Why?

    Get a fucking life troll.

    EF
     
    #34     Sep 28, 2011
  5. aaaahaha

    :D :D :D
     
    #35     Sep 28, 2011
  6. ddouglas

    ddouglas

    Excellent
     
    #36     Sep 28, 2011
  7. was the fuking hardest thing I've ever done in my live, and it took me 3 straight full years...but I was spending on average 12h/day there where times when I was wake up even 48 hours

    I was passionate driven by the market otherwise I couldn't have made it as there where many ups and downs. I must to say that the downs moments where testing my mind,glad I survive.

    Now I know that to be succesful I have to be frightened. My biggest hits have always come after I have had a great period and I started to think that I knew something.

    That is why my guiding philosophy is playing great defense. If you make a good trade, don't think it is because you have some uncanny forseight.Always maintain your sense of confidence, but keep it in check.
     
    #37     Sep 28, 2011
  8. kut2k2

    kut2k2

    No.

    Discipline is not an edge, neither is money management. An edge is positive expectancy. Try taking your discipline and your money management to a roulette wheel and see how far they get you. You'll lose sooner or later because at the roulette wheel, your opponent (the casino) has the edge. Your roulette expectation is negative, and all the discipline and money management skill in the universe won't overcome that.

    Discipline keeps you from betting (trading) when you have no edge. Money management keeps you from overbetting your edge, assuming you actually have one.

    We have a whole forum (Psychology) designed for traders who can't distinguish between lack of discipline and lack of having the necessary edge to begin with. It's pretty sad stuff.
     
    #38     Sep 28, 2011
  9. A-No1

    A-No1

    Real market inefficiency does exist if you train your "eye".

    W A T C H E V E R Y T I C K. Everyday, years.
     
    #39     Sep 28, 2011
  10. achilles28

    achilles28

    Yes, use volatility-dependent position-sizing/stops.
     
    #40     Sep 28, 2011