Archive for ‘scalper’

How to Scalp the ES Emini: A Day Traders Delight

By trader7757, 12 January, 2010, 1 Comment

There are a variety of day trading styles that traders employ, some with great success, others with less than satisfactory results.  My style of day trading, scalping, is a direct reflection of my personality, experience and emotional disposition. ES Emini day traders who scalp typically stay in trades for five minutes or less, or longer, if need be.

My views on the way the market functions precludes me from making long term commitments to a given market direction.   Market prognostication is an inexact science, at best, and most economists and day traders have a miserable track record of predicting the future direction of market movement.  So, I don’t even try.  I suspect I would be as poor at predicting futures market direction as the experts.

As a adherent to portions of chaos theory, I believe there is a level of randomness to the market, which makes it less than predictable in the long term.  I do believe that certain means can be employed, and probabilities analyzed, that will allow a day trader to get an idea of what the market may do in the next ten minutes, though.  Chaos theory is about small patterns, called fractals, that exist in a far larger random pattern.  I take advantage of those smaller patterns and try to pull two or three points (on both the long or short side of a position), and then exit with my small prize.  Of course, if I find myself in a continuing trend, I may push my profit limits higher to take advantage of the trend.   By and large, though, I am looking for two or three points.

A casual glance at any intraday chart will show an undulating wave pattern that is the basis for scalping.  I try to identify the starting point of a wave and exit the trade when the little spurt of momentum stops.  Of course, there are days when the market trends in one direction, not often, and on those days I may take a position and hold until my comfort level erodes and I am ready to take a profit.

When you are in a winning day trade, you never lose money by exiting the trade.  Sure, maybe the trade angled upwards another two points and you did not participate in that price action, but I am still content with my three points.

Never let a winning trade become a losing trade.  Take that to the bank because it is a common mistake by a legion of traders.

On the ES Emini contact I set my stops fairly tight, usually a 12 tick bracket and never adjust my stop lower to accommodate a lousy trade.  If I am wrong, I am wrong.  My goal is to find another trade that is profitable.

I don’t hold trades overnight, and I don’t set up trades and walk away.  The scalping style requires constant attention to the day trade at hand, and this requirement makes it an unpopular choice for traders who don’t care to spend a lot of time at the computer.  You will be spending time watching charts looking for trades, and once you are in a trade it is important to monitor the trade.

In baseball terms, scalpers are singles hitters.  Nothing more.   We may hit an occasional home run, but the is the exception, not the rule.  The goal of a scalper is to extra small chunks 5-8 times a day from the market.

Numbers, Manipulation and the Commerce Department

By trader7757, 22 December, 2009, No Comment

Some days it is just plain hard not to laugh at the ridiculous manipulation of numbers the Commerce Department spews forth.  So you can imagine my astonishment this morning when GDP numbers were revised downward from the 2.8% growth rate reported last month, which had been revised downward from the original report of 3.5%.  We have finally settled on a mundane 2.2% annual GDP, since this is the final revision.  On a positive note, the current revision is still the highest GDP since the third quarter of 2007.

The talking point on government economic reports is always consistent, as we typically trumpet exceptional numbers on initial economic reports then quietly revise downward in following months.  The Commerce Department would say the numbers are revised as more information is gathered and a clearer picture of the economy emerges, and this is indeed a cogent argument.  The job of estimated the US GDP is a mammoth undertaking.   But that is not the problem, it has been a long time since I have seen numbers revised upward as oppose to downward.  Simple probability would suggest that they would make revisions both to the upside and downside as more information becomes available.

I suppose it isn’t politically correct to question the Commerce Departments veracity, but initial numbers released by the Department have to be treated with a grain of salt, as few people put much confidence in the bright picture often portrayed by the numbers.   This practice is nothing new and did not start under the Obama Administration, it’s been going on for years, and has reduced the Commerce Departments credibility significantly.  The market has simply learned to shrug off the glowing reports issued and continue trading with what the market offers to be true through independent pricing models and reports issued by individual corporations.

What ever happened to the maxim to “err on the conservative side?”  Even MSNBC, the bastion of spinning horrible news into “not quite as bad as you think” news has taken to shrugging off statistical surprises and recommends, from time to time, to wait for the revisions to give us a clearer picture.   Oddly enough, it is my opinion that the general public has a pretty good idea what is going on in the economy.

I was at Wal-Mart yesterday and happen to know the manager pretty well, and questioned him how Christmas season sales were going and he smiled and rattled off a stream of positive numbers over last year.  I didn’t need to ask, really, the throngs of people in Wal-Mart indicate a change in spending.   On the other hand, I questioned the local Macy’s manager about Christmas sales and he stared at his shoes and mumbled incoherent jabber about a late surge he expected to bring the numbers up to par from last year.  The logic is simple:   Wal-Mart is cheaper than Macy’s and people are spending less this year.  I do’t need the Commerce Department to tell me that fact, either.  I can see and feel it.

As always, I am thankful I am scalper and don’t have to depend upon government prognostication to support myself.

ES Emini Day Trading: Eight Habits of Successful Trading Scalpers

By trader7757, 19 December, 2009, No Comment

ES Emini Day Trading:  Eight Habits of Successful Trading Scalpers

Not everyone day trades in the same manner, but successful scalpers tend to share some similar characteristics.  Over the years, I have noticed that:

1.  A good scalper is familiar with the contract he is trading.  He has extensive experience trading the contract, and most scalpers will tell you that every futures contract has it’s own idiosyncracies that make it unique.  Trading a contract you are unfamiliar with can be fun, if you are trading low contract numbers and trying to learn, but it is a tough place to try and make money.

2.  A good scalper is in complete control of his trading account.  He does not overtrade or trade more contracts than his pre-set risk tolerance.  There is often a tendency among less talented scalpers to start trading larger contract amounts if they find themselves having a bad day.  A good scalper does not try to over compensate and stays within the parameters he lives by in his trading life.  Doubling down is not a good way to make up for successive losing trades.

3.  A good scalper is self-disciplined and stays within himself.  He has a system and his goal is to execute his system flawlessly.  He does not take on a risky trade that is not within the parameters of his entries, and he does not bail out of a trade that is still within his parameters if he starts feeling bad about the trade.  The ability to stay under control during difficult trading times is the hallmark of a great scalper.

4.  A good scalper has a solid understanding of his own ability.  Some markets are very difficult to trade, especially when the price action is whipshawing back and forth and there is no clear trend.  There are risky techniques to trade these markets, but they involve considerable risk which is probably outside the risk parameters of the scalpers.   Trading is not like Texas Hold ‘Em, you never go all in, and you never bluff.

5.  A good scalper realizes that the market is always right and he is always wrong.  This is a tough one to swallow, but when I make a losing trade, even though the set up was just exactly what I was looking for and the price started moving in the expected direction, then turns south and I get stop out, I am wrong.  The market is a constant, so it is always right.  It may not always be logical, but it is the ultimate decider of trading truth.

6.  A good scalper keeps track of his trading.  Most good scalpers keep a trading diary and perhaps even the daily chart for every day they trade.  I frequently go back six months and look at the things I did well and some of the things I did poorly.  It is part of the method of learning to trade to keep track of where you have been and revisit that place from time to time.  You don’t live in the past or dwell on your mistakes, you learn from your mistakes.

7.  A good scalper controls all the outside variables in his trading environment.  Many traders listen to music while they trade, some prefer silence, but very few listen to the trendy market television shows that blare out all sorts of speculation and rumor.  Scalpers trade the chart in front of them, and that chart contains all the information they need.  There is no need for some television talking head to skew your thinking, and it can happen.  The trading atmosphere should be away from the family, tv, radio anything that can distract, and the family should understand that while dad is trading he should be left to trade.

8.  And finally, a good trader has a healthy perspective on life.  He understands that as a scalper he does not have to worry about the broader trends effecting the economy or the world, at least from a trading standpoint.   He knows that all the information he needs is right there in the price action and indicators he has come to rely upon, and he trust his system to serve him well.  Trading isn’t everything in his life, but it is his income.  But trading gives him the time to spend with his children and family, his leisure time is enhanced, and he has a chance to make the world a better place instead of working long hours in the corporate life.

I am a long time retail and institutional trader who now only trades part time, usually in the morning. I enjoy writing informational articles about my style of trading so others may benefit.

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