NexusFi: Find Your Edge


Home Menu

 





Just turned "Pro" and could use a little help, or guidance


Discussion in Trading Journals

Updated
      Top Posters
    1. looks_one Merkd1904 with 68 posts (78 thanks)
    2. looks_two bobwest with 8 posts (17 thanks)
    3. looks_3 matthew28 with 7 posts (21 thanks)
    4. looks_4 atrade with 5 posts (1 thanks)
      Best Posters
    1. looks_one josh with 6.8 thanks per post
    2. looks_two matthew28 with 3 thanks per post
    3. looks_3 bobwest with 2.1 thanks per post
    4. looks_4 Merkd1904 with 1.1 thanks per post
    1. trending_up 11,999 views
    2. thumb_up 207 thanks given
    3. group 15 followers
    1. forum 108 posts
    2. attach_file 316 attachments




 
Search this Thread

Just turned "Pro" and could use a little help, or guidance

  #31 (permalink)
 
snax's Avatar
 snax 
Chicago, IL
Legendary Price Action Student
 
Experience: Beginner
Platform: Sierra Chart
Broker: Edge Clear
Trading: MES
Posts: 2,170 since Feb 2019
Thanks Given: 9,613
Thanks Received: 9,622


Merkd1904 View Post
Your statement isn’t trollesque at all. You’re just giving your opinion. And you’re doing it in a tone that’s not condescending. Although stealing a beer and slapping is excessive.

You are correct, I meant that to be light-hearted but I'm sorry it didn't come off as such. My apologies and I really do wish you the best!

Visit my NexusFi Trade Journal Reply With Quote
Thanked by:

Can you help answer these questions
from other members on NexusFi?
Ninja Mobile Trader VPS (ninjamobiletrader.com)
Trading Reviews and Vendors
My NT8 Volume Profile Split by Asian/Euro/Open
NinjaTrader
Futures True Range Report
The Elite Circle
The space time continuum and the dynamics of a financial …
Emini and Emicro Index
New Micros: Ultra 10-Year & Ultra T-Bond -- Live Now
Treasury Notes and Bonds
 
  #32 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147


josh View Post
I don't think this was a blow-off top in the ES, but I'm open to that possibility. Given how I trade, it doesn't make much difference either way. Today we closed < 1% from the ATH put in four days ago, and the high in NQ looks like we need at least another 500 points or so above it to balance things out, before we even think about going lower; of course, that's just my analysis on it, which is worth nothing really, and I could be *very* wrong. But, I don't take viewpoints contrary to someone else, because then my ego will creep in, and I'll make it about "me versus him" instead of trading the market as I see it, so I just shrug and say, what will the market offer today? And then do my best to get out of my own way and trade the probabilities.

I feel this. And let me preface this with saying i've put a clear wedge between my longer or even short term analysis and my day trading. Unless a set up is there that jives with that analysis i'm not trying to will it into existence. Sure, i have a bias, But i learned a long time ago tbe market doesn't give a f*ck what you want or think it should do. And about your adversarial stance when taking the opposing argument i hear that as well. People sometimes take the bull/bear thing too far like they're gangbanging or something. And to your last point that's all you can do, trade what the market gives you. Or else you start trying to force trades and it ends in tears.



Quoting 
I know it sucks to have your balls busted. There was a great trader named Gary who used to post on the site, and he would do that to me, and it would sting just a little bit. My ego would start to rear its ugly head, but I'd eventually tell it to shut up, because Gary knew a lot more than my ego. (Note: I'm not comparing myself to Gary, who is truly a great trader). Keep in mind that you are the one who said you "could use a little help, or guidance." You didn't say that it had to arrive in a pretty package.

I understand that. But, not gonna lie i felt attacked. If not my trading than my character. You did have decent advice dashed into your post. But all i read were the barbs. And let's be honest, never having interacted before they were barbs.


Quoting 
Since you have been trading pretty much out of control (you can bleed an account and be in control, but you can't blow accounts like you did, that quickly, if you're in control), I thought perhaps a good ol' fashioned kick in the ass from yours truly would be helpful. Apparently I was wrong, and it seems that you prefer to let the market do the ass kicking, and boy oh boy, does it have some in store for you, I expect.

To be clear, it's been a really good week, no one pissed in my corn flakes, and I'm a happy guy. It's just that I've just seen probably a hundred traders just like you over the 10 years I've been on this site come in with this same attitude, and sometimes it's frustrating to read, knowing exactly what's likely to happen, when you yourself can't see it. You won't see me Monday, or any day. I tried to help, I failed, and I'll sleep peacefully this evening without thinking any more about this exchange. Sincerely wishing you a good weekend.

All noted. But, out of curiosity if you do find it in the kindness of your heart to make a showing again, how was it out of control. I'm genuinely curious. And i'm also still curious what you're definition of size is.

I come from options trading mainly, and have been trading since 2017, First account i blew up was from one of your points, being married to an idea.. Particularly the breakout into the 3000's back 2019. You know, 2/10's inverted, repo blow up, trade war, etc, etc. Second was pure inexperience trying to trade the COVID downdraft. And the third from not being able to manage risk effectively. I've been in at least some form of the trenches. None of these have been huge accounts as i'm not somebody who has excessive disposable income. But they're accounts that i built up from relatively small start bases. So believe me, i get it.

But, regardless. Have a good weekend yourself.

Reply With Quote
Thanked by:
  #33 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147



mcjackson View Post
I wanted to respond to your original question about overtrading - I feel like we're probably in similar places. I've been funded by Topstep a couple of times and currently have a Pro account. My big hairy problem has always been overtrading, but I've slowly been getting a handle on it. Really, really slowly

This is what's helped me - hope some of this is relevant for you:

#1) I set my own hard stops with R Trader, and I keep it really tight - initially -$250, currently -$400.

#2) I started putting much more focus on creative outlets like my journal and a blog where I write. I took the Tharp trader personality test years ago and one of my red flags was that I'm creative - if I don't find a channel for that, it's gonna mess with my trading performance. I think we might have some common ground on this.

I've found that when my focus is on great journaling / writing / video work, the trading session becomes this small little thing instead of a massive pressure moment.

#3) Following a big rule break or a bad session, I'll give myself a very limited number of trades and slowly build up. I think I saw someone else suggest something similar. My version is:

Day 0: some big painful mistake
Day 1: you get 3 bullets. 3 trades, no more, no matter what.
Day 2: you get 3 strikes. You can trade more, but only take 3 losses.
Day 3: you should be back to "ok".

#4) Never give back more than half.

I had a coach who told me his biggest rule addition was that he refused to give back more than 50% of his profits on a winning day. And should you break that rule, you most definitely never turn a green day red.


Hope that's helpful. The fact you're aware of it is already a pretty important step, imo.


This is absolutely helpful, and insightful as well. It sounds like you're a couple steps ahead of me at least in your professional stature.

Quick question on the $250 risk limit - How did you trade that? Was it essentially just one in the chamber and that's all you got for the day? And if you win the trade do you keep trading?

Also, what's your R/R look like? Like, are you only going for 2-3 point moves or 8-10? Do you have a preference? Is it conditional?

I think i'm working mine out now; using Tradovate, if they'll let me, to run a soft stop at $450 daily loss limit, and either a $1000 or $1200 soft stop on a profit target. Then run maybe a $1200-$1500 trailing max drawdown hard stop.

I haven't developed crawl, walk, run strat after a bad day yet, but i do appreciate the feedback.



Quoting 
Never give back more than half.

This is something that i hadn't heard until last week. And it makes perfect sense. So i'm trying to stay cognizant of it because it's makes perfect sense. This will be one of my golden rules as well.


Quoting 
I had a coach who told me his biggest rule addition was that he refused to give back more than 50% of his profits on a winning day. And should you break that rule, you most definitely never turn a green day red.

Who/where/how did you find coaching?

Reply With Quote
Thanked by:
  #34 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147


matthew28 View Post
I used to read the Topstep Community Facebook page and there would sometimes be people saying that they used TSTrader and had trades go off that they didn't think they had placed.

I use TSTrader and would often enter a position with a stoploss order automatically entered, but no profit target. But I had to be careful that later when I exited if I still had the bracket on that would also place a stoploss order for the exiting trade so there would now be two stoploss orders in the market after the position had been flattened and I had to hit the "Exit at Market and Cancel" button to cancel them. It would be the same with a full bracket order if one took a partial exit on a contract before reaching the original exit target, so adding extra orders in to the book.

Another thought, in a similar way to you with TradingView I sometimes used the Jigsaw DOM to trade through on the Combine account and the trades would also show on the TSTrader charts and it occasionally seemed to confuse one platform or another if I say entered a trade on the Jigsaw DOM and exited trading off the TSTrader chart.

I have a small "Working Orders" window always open so I can see orders appear but also make sure I have nothing pending once I go flat. I now always tap the Exit/Cancel button like a crack-monkey as soon as I fully close a position. And because sometimes I place an exit order, hear the "order filled" alert and don't register that it was actually only a partial fill and I still have one contract or so remaining on.

Just a couple of thoughts which might or might not be relevant to the unexpected fills question.
Enjoy your weekend.


I've heard the same thing. And, the night i started the combine i did have one bracket in RTY that would send the buy or sell limit, but not the accompanying stop and profit target. That was a red flag, and i don't want to be conspiratorial as it is 99.99% probably my fault, but it was just weird.

And i think what you described is really the best explanation. But it was just weird the way it looks broken down.

For instance:




The three highlight cells above show a timestamp of all the same time. One was a buy, one a sell 107.25 points away? As well as one sell that was rejected. All clicked into Tradingview. While i was asleep. I haven't dove too far into the data a it had been a long week but like i said, it's more than likely i either left an errant contract on the books, or somehow set one to many before i went back to bed.


Quoting 
I have a small "Working Orders" window always open so I can see orders appear but also make sure I have nothing pending once I go flat. I now always tap the Exit/Cancel button like a crack-monkey as soon as I fully close a position. And because sometimes I place an exit order, hear the "order filled" alert and don't register that it was actually only a partial fill and I still have one contract or so remaining on.

This is smart and also a good habit to have regardless, in my first combine i got to like day 4 and $500 away from the profit target and left an errant contract open in /YM that got hit at 4:25, resetting me.

For TSTrader and Jigsaw in tandem are you running the browser or app version? Desktop or laptop?

Thanks for the replies! Enjoy your weekend as well.

Reply With Quote
Thanked by:
  #35 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147


snax View Post
You are correct, I meant that to be light-hearted but I'm sorry it didn't come off as such. My apologies and I really do wish you the best!

No need for apologies. I always appreciate different insight.

Have a good weekend and thank you.

Reply With Quote
  #36 (permalink)
 
mcjackson's Avatar
 mcjackson 
Colorado Springs, CO
 
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: Ninjatrader
Broker: Ninjatrader
Trading: NQ
Posts: 40 since Mar 2014
Thanks Given: 77
Thanks Received: 147


Merkd1904 View Post
This is absolutely helpful, and insightful as well. It sounds like you're a couple steps ahead of me at least in your professional stature.

Nah, I'm just picking out some best practices I try and adhere to. I still goof up too much for comfort - for example, I had a losing day after 8 winning days on the Pro account, but guess what - I broke my loss limit. I didn't blow the account, but I lost $930 (I'm still up $3300 on the acct, but it def hurt emotionally, hurt my stats, and generally stung for a few days).

Old me would have found a million excuses to explain it away but nowadays I'm trying to act like my own coach and sorta take a "detached interest" in these breaks and try and pull a clear lesson from each.

My lesson from last week was:
a) The bigger the wins, the more vulnerable I get, the more likely I am to break the rules and do something that hurts financially/emotionally/etc.

The relevant challenge questions I've written out propped up on my desk are:

#1) Do you want to be right, or do you want to be profitable?
#2) (from a conversation with John Hoagland at Topstep -- a few years ago when I was REALLY screwing up regularly, he told me something like: "You obviously know what you're doing, but you keep tearing yourself down. This is a profession where you can build your castle, brick by brick - but if you keep tearing it down, all you'll end up with is a f**ing pile of bricks."....so the second Q is "Are you building a castle or are you building a f**ing pile of bricks?"



Quoting 
Quick question on the $250 risk limit - How did you trade that? Was it essentially just one in the chamber and that's all you got for the day? And if you win the trade do you keep trading?

I trade really tight - my stops are typically -8-12 ticks and I start a position with 1 contract. I started out as a CL trader where I'd have -3 tick stops....had to adapt as I moved to the NQ.


Quoting 
Also, what's your R/R look like? Like, are you only going for 2-3 point moves or 8-10? Do you have a preference? Is it conditional?

My trades are typically 3:1 reward to risk, my win rate hovers around 50%, and I tend to have a higher % of winning days - 80-90%. Happy to paste my Topstep chart if you'd like more details.

I typically start with one contract and add another 1 on winners on the Topstep acct (2 and 2 on my personal account). I know there's a counterargument for that but it tends to work for me.

On that note, I've found it *good* to keep track of my trade-by-trade stats.....but it's been MUCH more valuable to start tracking my daily stats. I think this is important for day traders especially. The main reason is the downside risk - most of us are really good at sticking to an individual trade stop (often because it's totally automated) but much tougher to stick to a daily stop. Daily sessions to us are like individual trades are to swing traders, imo.




Quoting 
Who/where/how did you find coaching?

I try and hire at least one coach every year, at least for one session. The bigger names, for the most part, have ranged from disappointing to outright terrible. They're often great traders and terrible teachers. I've found a few gems from people with strong processes, though.

The ones I've had good experiences with:

- Lance Beggs. Never actually hired him but I go back to a few email exchanges that totally flipped my perspective and changed my career. Huge influence on me.
- Tom Dante. Also never did 1:1 but was in one of the first runs of his course about ten years ago and in his room. He brought a ton of practical exercises that I've used over and over.
- Tim Racette. I hired him for a month of calls last year and he helped both my R:R and my approach to a daily schedule.
- Paul Singh. I worked with him for about a year in 2015 when I dabbled with stocks. Learned a ton about structured, repeating setups in intraday moves.

The common thread with all 4 of them is really, really clear -- they journal so much more seriously than anyone else I've ever met. THAT has been the biggest lesson from them.

Hope that's not too much -- I don't really comment much here but your post really made me think we've got a similar perspective and set of challenges.

Best of luck!!

Follow me on Twitter Visit my NexusFi Trade Journal Reply With Quote
  #37 (permalink)
 
matthew28's Avatar
 matthew28 
United Kingdom
 
Experience: Beginner
Platform: Bookmap
Broker: Stage 5, Rithmic
Trading: US Equity Index Futures
Posts: 1,250 since Sep 2013
Thanks Given: 3,500
Thanks Received: 2,532


Merkd1904 View Post
For TSTrader and Jigsaw in tandem are you running the browser or app version? Desktop or laptop?

Thanks for the replies! Enjoy your weekend as well.

I use the Desktop version of TSTrader, partly because I always imagine a purposely designed program should in theory run better than something running inside a browser window. I am always surprised at how alternative browsers, such as:Chrome, Firefox or Edge, can have vastly different CPU or memory use for the same application webpage.
(Jigsaw daytradr uses the same Topstep username and Password as entered in to TSTrader and they can both be running at the same time).

You do not win as a trader, you just get to play again the next day. If that game doesn’t appeal to you then you should not trade. Gary Norden
Reply With Quote
Thanked by:
  #38 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147


mcjackson View Post
Nah, I'm just picking out some best practices I try and adhere to. I still goof up too much for comfort - for example, I had a losing day after 8 winning days on the Pro account, but guess what - I broke my loss limit. I didn't blow the account, but I lost $930 (I'm still up $3300 on the acct, but it def hurt emotionally, hurt my stats, and generally stung for a few days).

Old me would have found a million excuses to explain it away but nowadays I'm trying to act like my own coach and sorta take a "detached interest" in these breaks and try and pull a clear lesson from each.

My lesson from last week was:
a) The bigger the wins, the more vulnerable I get, the more likely I am to break the rules and do something that hurts financially/emotionally/etc.

The relevant challenge questions I've written out propped up on my desk are:

#1) Do you want to be right, or do you want to be profitable?
#2) (from a conversation with John Hoagland at Topstep -- a few years ago when I was REALLY screwing up regularly, he told me something like: "You obviously know what you're doing, but you keep tearing yourself down. This is a profession where you can build your castle, brick by brick - but if you keep tearing it down, all you'll end up with is a f**ing pile of bricks."....so the second Q is "Are you building a castle or are you building a f**ing pile of bricks?"




I trade really tight - my stops are typically -8-12 ticks and I start a position with 1 contract. I started out as a CL trader where I'd have -3 tick stops....had to adapt as I moved to the NQ.



My trades are typically 3:1 reward to risk, my win rate hovers around 50%, and I tend to have a higher % of winning days - 80-90%. Happy to paste my Topstep chart if you'd like more details.

I typically start with one contract and add another 1 on winners on the Topstep acct (2 and 2 on my personal account). I know there's a counterargument for that but it tends to work for me.

On that note, I've found it *good* to keep track of my trade-by-trade stats.....but it's been MUCH more valuable to start tracking my daily stats. I think this is important for day traders especially. The main reason is the downside risk - most of us are really good at sticking to an individual trade stop (often because it's totally automated) but much tougher to stick to a daily stop. Daily sessions to us are like individual trades are to swing traders, imo.





I try and hire at least one coach every year, at least for one session. The bigger names, for the most part, have ranged from disappointing to outright terrible. They're often great traders and terrible teachers. I've found a few gems from people with strong processes, though.

The ones I've had good experiences with:

- Lance Beggs. Never actually hired him but I go back to a few email exchanges that totally flipped my perspective and changed my career. Huge influence on me.
- Tom Dante. Also never did 1:1 but was in one of the first runs of his course about ten years ago and in his room. He brought a ton of practical exercises that I've used over and over.
- Tim Racette. I hired him for a month of calls last year and he helped both my R:R and my approach to a daily schedule.
- Paul Singh. I worked with him for about a year in 2015 when I dabbled with stocks. Learned a ton about structured, repeating setups in intraday moves.

The common thread with all 4 of them is really, really clear -- they journal so much more seriously than anyone else I've ever met. THAT has been the biggest lesson from them.

Hope that's not too much -- I don't really comment much here but your post really made me think we've got a similar perspective and set of challenges.

Best of luck!!


How long overall have you been doing this? I read your first post on your journal and our stories line up pretty well. Work full time, also competitive, etc.



Like i think bob mentioned above, what gets me after a win streak is over confidence. I tend to lean into positions heavier instead of doing the opposite like i know i should.


And solid rules/mantras to live by. The pile of bricks one somehow resonates really well with me haha. I really haven’t had that much interaction with the Topstep coaches or their risk team. It was just a few fleeting phone calls and they felt more impersonal than i would have liked but i get it, with more people passing every day it’s probably a little hectic. They don’t even offer 1 on 1 coaching anymore. But i think that’s one aspect that’s missing is just someone to challenge my decisions in real time or at least be familiar with how i’m trading.


And 8-12 in NQ is extremely tight. I think a 22 tick stop is too tight sometimes. I mean your entries have to be perfect. And even then NQ exhibits more f*ckery than the other indexes as well. With the book as thin as it has been sometimes it’s easy for someone or some people to just market a 10-20 lot and it can wick 5-8 POINTS easy. That and i honestly believe there’s programs that are literally just shooting price into pools of liquidity (stops) the entire session. I mean you can have a 25 point range on a 1m candle on both directions sometimes. It’s absolutely insane but also part of the reason i enjoy trading it so much.


My R/R is roughly the same as you depending on the week but my win rate is at least 10 points less. 50% and a 3:1 is honestly pretty fucking good. And sure man, paste it in.


And with numbers like that is it just that when yoi take losses you get into revenge trade mode and run out of quarters to put into the machine? Or do you generally have (or did you have) longer drawdowns as in days or weeks?


Exactly what stats are you tracking? I’ve started doing the same. If they’re going to give us the data might as well use it right? I spent an hour or two setting up a google data suite and have all my data in .CSV’s.

How exactly did you find these people to help you or coach??

And what’s funny is more and more i’m seeing that as well. I never really talked my trades out at the end of the day. I always like, kept the data. But never really verbalized the day. And even since i started this i can see the benefit. It’s always meditative or therapeutic in some sense.

And thanks man i really appreciate it. Best of luck to you as well!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Reply With Quote
Thanked by:
  #39 (permalink)
Merkd1904
Atlanta, Georgia
 
Posts: 94 since May 2021
Thanks Given: 55
Thanks Received: 147


matthew28 View Post
I use the Desktop version of TSTrader, partly because I always imagine a purposely designed program should in theory run better than something running inside a browser window. I am always surprised at how alternative browsers, such as:Chrome, Firefox or Edge, can have vastly different CPU or memory use for the same application webpage.
(Jigsaw daytradr uses the same Topstep username and Password as entered in to TSTrader and they can both be running at the same time).


It’s astounding isn’t it?

Both Tradovate’s Trade app and the TSTrader app are resource sucks to an extreme, for whatever reason they’re better for me on browser, i’m using Chrome.

Early on, in times of super high volatility i’d have all versions of both apps lag to an extreme. I’m talking like a solid 1-3 seconds before refreshes. Specifically on days like non farm payrolls. And it happens at both my office, and home. Not to mention the connection to both is randomly dropped all the time as well. Have you had the same experience at all?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Reply With Quote
  #40 (permalink)
GH0ST 0P
Columbus
 
Posts: 11 since Oct 2019
Thanks Given: 75
Thanks Received: 24


As someone who is in a similar position, sometimes it can help to have someone looking from the outside in.

Everyone gives great relationship advice to others, but can't see the writing on the wall in their own.


So here are my observations:

1. Why are you trading so much? I used to take a bunch of trades as well. I'd backtested my strategy and the setup happened around the clock, so why wouldn't I take them? Sometimes I'd have monster days and others... well wouldn't look so different than some that you have posted. After a ton of journaling and working on my self awareness I came to realize I was degrading mentally after about 3hrs. Almost imperceptibly. It wasn't super consistent, but over a large sample size, I made noticeably worse decisions after 3-4hrs.

Many of us have been successful in other areas of life, whether in management, business or sport or what have you and the approach of "Just keep pushing", is one I really embraced. Push through, get it done. Make it happen.

Trading I've learned is the complete opposite. More isn't better, and constantly pushing and trying to force things just blows account.

So now I trade for 1HR a day. Stress is down, errors are down. I have a strict start and stop time, and I don't look at my phone anymore. Just not worth it. I show up, do my job and enjoy the rest of my day.

2. Maybe I missed it, but are you journaling? Not just reviewing your stats, but actively writing down on paper how you're feeling while you're trading. This was huge for me. At the time I was willing to try anything. But constant writing in my journal how I'm feeling, what I'm thinking and why has been hugely beneficial to my overall self-awareness.


3. Like us all you have many problems to tackle. For me, I'd pick the one thing that had the biggest impact on my trading; that if I could just stop fucking up this one thing, would make a significant difference in my results and I'd work on that. More specifically it would be my process goal for the month and I would track my progress until I nailed it every day for a month. For instance, a year ago it was position sizing. Everyday my goal was to make sure I'd position sized correctly on all my trades. Once I was perfect for a month I moved on to the next thing. I find focusing on one vice at a time to be a very effective way of self-improvement.

4. Don't look at your P/L. Whether you think it affects you or not, it does. That's one reason I don't like TSTrader. Even the DLL bar can cause anxiety. Draws you away from focusing on your Process and instead you end up thinking: this next ones gotta be a winner. Not a good place to be in. If trading were a videogame, it'd be the easiest videogame ever. Introduce $ and pressure and next thing you know everyone's doing dumb shit. I don't check my p/l til the end of the week and sometimes not even then. I do keep stats on my %, R multiple etc. but the $ value just distracts from focusing on what's important: 100% compliance on my PROCESS.

5. Expectations. goes hand in hand with #4, if you're always extrapolating your gains forward on your calculator like I was, you should probably stop. Expectation = Frustration. Once you start using words like "should" and "luck", you've already loss. To succeed you really gotta let go of the outcome and just do your best to execute with 100% compliance. Noone knows what going to happen next, the only thing we know for sure is that if we follow our process perfectly we'll likely come out ahead at the end of the week/month.

Hope some of this helps,

Cheers

Reply With Quote




Last Updated on October 10, 2021


© 2024 NexusFi™, s.a., All Rights Reserved.
Av Ricardo J. Alfaro, Century Tower, Panama City, Panama, Ph: +507 833-9432 (Panama and Intl), +1 888-312-3001 (USA and Canada)
All information is for educational use only and is not investment advice. There is a substantial risk of loss in trading commodity futures, stocks, options and foreign exchange products. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
About Us - Contact Us - Site Rules, Acceptable Use, and Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy - Downloads - Top
no new posts