Grinding it out, day after day

Discussion in 'Journals' started by lescor, Jan 9, 2010.

  1. lescor

    lescor

    It's like flipping a coin repeatedly and hitting a streak of five heads in a row. Doesn't happen often, but if you do it long enough you should expect to see it.

    I haven't traded badly or anything, things just haven't clicked for what I'm doing. Like I said, there's been some good market action lately, and my time will come again. Hopefully soon for my wife's sake, I get kinda grumpy at times like this. I really hate losing money, lol.
     
    #1371     Jan 23, 2011
  2. saico

    saico

    Lescor,

    a more general question. For your rtm strategies (except of the opg's), did you ever make tests between closing the trades intra day and holding them over night till the market open of the next trading day?

    Thanks in advance!
     
    #1372     Jan 23, 2011
  3. DGunz

    DGunz

    You are candid about your initial years of losing money/hobby/addiction, which takes a lack of arrogance to do. No wonder, when you finally applied yourself you succeeded.

    Thanks for the thread and I hope you do, find time to, occassional post commentary.
     
    #1373     Jan 24, 2011
  4. Your joking right? The stock market is never wrong.
     
    #1374     Jan 24, 2011
  5. Rule #1 in trading: the stock market is never wrong.
     
    #1375     Jan 25, 2011
  6. njrookie

    njrookie

    Rule #2

    Trading is a probability game. There is nothing right or wrong. With a large enough number of trades, winning-losing patterns will repeat themselves.

    njrookie
     
    #1376     Jan 29, 2011
  7. the market is often wrong because it is an emotional entity. do you think the market was right during the flash crash? was the market right when panic drove it to the lows in early 2009?
     
    #1377     Jan 29, 2011
  8. The market is very often wrong. The mantra that markets are always right is just one example of rehashed rehash that is simply wrong :)
     
    #1378     Jan 29, 2011
  9. likewise, the stock index market was "wrong" Wed & Thu when volume and ranges were waaay below historical norms on any measure of electronic market existence.

    The market then righted itself on Friday. Meanwhile, it's our job to remain solvent longer than the market remains irrational :)
     
    #1379     Jan 29, 2011
  10. The market is NEVER wrong. Trading opinions are irrelevant. The only thing that matters is price and volume. When price violates your theory, you're wrong.

    The market will always overshoot on the upside as well as the downside. That's what makes a market. Holding positions until the market proves you right will lead you to the poorhouse.
     
    #1380     Jan 29, 2011