dr.blix
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hi, just wanted to put up my process for people to criticise...i'm very aware that there are huge holes and risks, i'm in the process of dealing with some of these now. sorry about the size of this post.
i started in october. i picked 10 FTSE 100 companies (with a few 250 companies) as i thought this would be a fairly safe way to start.
i only trade these companies...i realise this might be very limiting, but i don't have the skills or software to pick random companies and feel confident trading them. i think i'm beginning to get a feel for each company's price action in different conditions/markets. i've sort of spread sectors, but really i'm bank and insurance heavy. i picked companies who's share price is around or below £1, for some reason i found this easier psychologically and felt it simpler gauging their bottom (this may be utter nonsense?).
i use an online broker and use LSE's level 2. i traded for the first couple of months not knowing about charts/indicators. i used a level 2 order book and my daily price 'averages'...i'm sort of glad i didn't know how to use charts at first, it really tuned me into price and becoming accustomed to a companies price in different conditions. i still take the L2 order books ratio of buyers/sellers as a major indicator of a poss reversal, and through staring at the same companies order books every day for 3 months i think i have a bit of a feel for what can happen with different order book depths/ratios. i now use a 1 minute line chart with 14 period and 50 period MAs, a RSI and Volume.
my general idea now seems to be to try and make 5% on each position. i have 8K capital and each position is 2K. i learned how to use a spreadsheet so i can calculate the three S and R points around each company's daily pivot. i pick one of these support points (or the company's previous low) depending on what the index/company/asian markets are like. i set my orders before the market opens and wait. it can get a bit hectic when i have a few positions open at the same time.
one of my biggest problems is stops. i feel stupid saying this, but i rarely use them. i know this is going to knock me out until i get rid of this bad habit. 'timsk' has given me some great info on what my stops should be. my problem is, bar one occasion (BG.), every bad position i opened eventually cycled back and then exceeded my original position. in these instances, i either sold a few days before they would have made a profit, or sold for a small profit (thankful to be out of a bad position) while they went on to higher prices. through these few particular experiences, a bad habit has been formed where i hold onto bad positions until they reverse. so far they always have, but i suppose one day it won't and i'll be flipping burgers.
i've been living off my trading for a couple of months, so far i'm £500 down on my initial £8500 capital. although after this shocking past few days FTSE activity that may be a little lower now.
i would really appreciate criticism on my clunky process...sorry again for the huge post.
i started in october. i picked 10 FTSE 100 companies (with a few 250 companies) as i thought this would be a fairly safe way to start.
i only trade these companies...i realise this might be very limiting, but i don't have the skills or software to pick random companies and feel confident trading them. i think i'm beginning to get a feel for each company's price action in different conditions/markets. i've sort of spread sectors, but really i'm bank and insurance heavy. i picked companies who's share price is around or below £1, for some reason i found this easier psychologically and felt it simpler gauging their bottom (this may be utter nonsense?).
i use an online broker and use LSE's level 2. i traded for the first couple of months not knowing about charts/indicators. i used a level 2 order book and my daily price 'averages'...i'm sort of glad i didn't know how to use charts at first, it really tuned me into price and becoming accustomed to a companies price in different conditions. i still take the L2 order books ratio of buyers/sellers as a major indicator of a poss reversal, and through staring at the same companies order books every day for 3 months i think i have a bit of a feel for what can happen with different order book depths/ratios. i now use a 1 minute line chart with 14 period and 50 period MAs, a RSI and Volume.
my general idea now seems to be to try and make 5% on each position. i have 8K capital and each position is 2K. i learned how to use a spreadsheet so i can calculate the three S and R points around each company's daily pivot. i pick one of these support points (or the company's previous low) depending on what the index/company/asian markets are like. i set my orders before the market opens and wait. it can get a bit hectic when i have a few positions open at the same time.
one of my biggest problems is stops. i feel stupid saying this, but i rarely use them. i know this is going to knock me out until i get rid of this bad habit. 'timsk' has given me some great info on what my stops should be. my problem is, bar one occasion (BG.), every bad position i opened eventually cycled back and then exceeded my original position. in these instances, i either sold a few days before they would have made a profit, or sold for a small profit (thankful to be out of a bad position) while they went on to higher prices. through these few particular experiences, a bad habit has been formed where i hold onto bad positions until they reverse. so far they always have, but i suppose one day it won't and i'll be flipping burgers.
i've been living off my trading for a couple of months, so far i'm £500 down on my initial £8500 capital. although after this shocking past few days FTSE activity that may be a little lower now.
i would really appreciate criticism on my clunky process...sorry again for the huge post.