Dispassionate
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Which is the more profitable?
coolTrader said:It depends on what instrument you are trading though
Dispassionate said:Which is the more profitable?
Stockjunkie said:Profit inntrading terms need to be defined as Reward : Risk , anything less than that may be considered outright gambling and not trading.
We must also narrow down what we mean by DT , as this can mean a number of different techniques.
What we must define it as , is mini PT's , thus a DT takes positions but does not hold them for as much as a PT due to the shorter time length , the US DT rooms have been mentioned as a good example.
As such , from my experience PT is far more profitable .
Bigbusiness said:Over the past two days the DJIA has hardly moved on a daily chart but there have been plenty of opportunities to DT. So I don't see PT as having an advantage, as DT has the potential to make a lot more points. I also find the methods I use for DT work much better than any method I have seen for PT. Not having to hold overnight lets me take each day as it comes and I don't have to waste time stuck in a bad trade.
Stockjunkie said:I know what you are going to say , and I know what I'm going to say in return.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=^DJI&t=3m&l=on&z=m&q=b&c=
darktone said:theres no answer to that non - sense question
Stockjunkie said:Your problem is that your method brings a low R:R , hence it fails on the longer term .
I know what you are going to say , and I know what I'm going to say in return.
Bigbusiness said:Banana, banana, frisby forty three. Was that what you thought I was going to say
peto said:43..Isn't that the answer to life, the universe, and everything?
Arbitrageur said:Your problem stockjunkie, is that you make sweeping statements that inherently undermine the point you are trying to make.
Arbitrageur said:There is the potential for DT to radically outperform PT - if correctly executed, Daytrading has the ability to capture profits from the intraday swings and daily range of the market.
Arbitrageur said:Position trading generally only captures the difference between the open and the close. So although a position trade will have a greater avg profit per trade than daytrading, daytrading can capture the range from each daily bar - more trades but smaller profits balanced with correspondingly smaller losses.
Arbitrageur said:The sum of capturing say 20-30% of the daily range of each daily bar from intraday trading will easily outperform capturing 20-30% of a bigger move made over multiple days from position trading.
Arbitrageur said:That doesnt translate into meaning that every trader can do either, or any type of trading successfully however. It also doesnt mean the either cannot be done. I know traders who intraday trade very successfully with highly enviable risk/reward ratios.
Dispassionate said:Let me see if I can clarify the problem a bit - The reason I asked the question is because ultimately if one is a daytrader, the time that you spend in front of your screen all day long has to be justified;
Say position trader has 100k capital
Say daytrader has 100k capital too.
If both were equal in intelligence and ability, who would get the better return on capital at the end of the year?
Bit of a hard question I know, but the problem of the value of time is a real one.