The one lesson I am having a hard time learning is to take my pips and wait for the next a++ setup. I am having a tendency to overtrade. I find some good setups and make a bunch of pips and then I try to trade the smaller moves after as the large move settles and I end up loosing my gains. I have broken even the last 2 days as a result (well, I consider 10-20 pips basically breaking even).
Also I am having a hard time mastering exits. I exit to soon and leave a bunch of pips on the table, or I wait and then the trade reverses and end up with 1 pip or something. I think the only solution to this is scaling positions. I need to leave a trade on as a runner. I need to take profit with the majority of my position when momentum stops but leave a runner and then add to the position and do it again as the trade resumes. If it is not an a++ setup, don't add a large position, only add as much as the runner and then place a stop at net breakeven just in case the added position goes against me. This way I can play the first a++ setup with a large position, exit at first sign of reversing momentum but leave a runner, add a small position if the trade resumes (only at a point where I can place the stop at net break even). Then I can add more small positions trailiing my stop behind the recent highs/lows and make exponential gains catching the small trend. If the trend turns out to run for a while, the gains with this low risk strategy could be large. I will exit with a loss on the final position, but the gains on all of the added positions will be substantial on a large trend and worse case scenario break even for 0 risk.
The trouble with this is managing the trade. I need to be quick on the draw, especially when manually trailing stops with multiple positions. I need to figure out a more efficient way to manually trail stops. For example as I was typing this I tried to manually trail the stop of 4 positions but was too slow and the market reversed before I could put the stops where I wanted to, ending up with a smaller profit. I probobly could have had an extra 20 pips or so if I was quicker.
As of right now I am up 233 pips for the day. I was at 246 earlier, then down to 201, then recovered to 233. I wouldn't have gone to 201 if I had a) scaled out of my position, b) not tried to chase the trade and get into less probable setups. Chasing the trade and getting whipsawed caused the loss. 1 hour until the Fed announces the rate cut. I might just chill till then, maybe do some vhands while I wait.
Also I am having a hard time mastering exits. I exit to soon and leave a bunch of pips on the table, or I wait and then the trade reverses and end up with 1 pip or something. I think the only solution to this is scaling positions. I need to leave a trade on as a runner. I need to take profit with the majority of my position when momentum stops but leave a runner and then add to the position and do it again as the trade resumes. If it is not an a++ setup, don't add a large position, only add as much as the runner and then place a stop at net breakeven just in case the added position goes against me. This way I can play the first a++ setup with a large position, exit at first sign of reversing momentum but leave a runner, add a small position if the trade resumes (only at a point where I can place the stop at net break even). Then I can add more small positions trailiing my stop behind the recent highs/lows and make exponential gains catching the small trend. If the trend turns out to run for a while, the gains with this low risk strategy could be large. I will exit with a loss on the final position, but the gains on all of the added positions will be substantial on a large trend and worse case scenario break even for 0 risk.
The trouble with this is managing the trade. I need to be quick on the draw, especially when manually trailing stops with multiple positions. I need to figure out a more efficient way to manually trail stops. For example as I was typing this I tried to manually trail the stop of 4 positions but was too slow and the market reversed before I could put the stops where I wanted to, ending up with a smaller profit. I probobly could have had an extra 20 pips or so if I was quicker.
As of right now I am up 233 pips for the day. I was at 246 earlier, then down to 201, then recovered to 233. I wouldn't have gone to 201 if I had a) scaled out of my position, b) not tried to chase the trade and get into less probable setups. Chasing the trade and getting whipsawed caused the loss. 1 hour until the Fed announces the rate cut. I might just chill till then, maybe do some vhands while I wait.