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| Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading As a pure discretionary trader, I still believe there is an edge in discretionary trading. Intuition comes into play as well as better entries. Why better entries? If one is a good tape reader he can pinpoint his entries and take minimal heat. This can save a trader a ton of points in the long run. I have a couple questions regarding this topic and could use your guys opinion. Do you think discretionary traders enter before automated traders? What are your thoughts on discretionary vs automation? What type of trader are you and which one do you prefer? Thanks, Soultrader
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![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading Quote:
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Of course, one of the advantages of a mechanical system is that it is consistent in the way it executes. Discretionary traders need to make sure that their trade decisions are made in consistent and systematic way so that they can continue to replicate in the future and determine what has been working over the longer term. Discretionary traders should not let too much subjectivity into their trading, otherwise they don't have a system. Maintaining a trading log and journal are critical to success for a discretionary trader, IMO. | ||
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| | #3 | ||
![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading I discretionary trade because my mission is to understand the markets as much as possible before getting more into system trading. I want to know how the market works for myself before building more. Took me 2 yrs to come up with 3 systems so I figure my learning curve in building them would increase as my discretionary gets better.
__________________ "Today is not my day, but it'll be my week." | ||
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![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading Quote:
I'm curious on average how many trades you get daily in your intraday trading system. From my understanding, it is difficulty to get more than 3 trades a day for an automated system. This is also one of the aspect I prefer discretionary trading over automated trading. A discretionary trader has the flexibility to trade by adjusting to different market conditions. He/she can be both a scalper and a swing trader. I'm not sure whether automated system have such a flexibility. Another aspect I prefer discretionary trading over automated trading is lower drawdown. I read something about the drawdown of automated system. It usually ranges from 20% to 50% annually. It's just too high, IMO. A good discretionary trader can have much lower drawdown as long as he has a sound trading method and good money management. | ||
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| | #5 | ||
![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading Quote:
I trade a portfolio of systems, no discretionary trader can come close to duplicating these results. From a conceptual view, the human mind could never find such systems, (I don't use AI). And from an execution view, any trader would burn out after a couple months trading something like this manually! Quote:
The main problem most trader face is they lack the technical skills required to implement automated systems. Start learning programming if you are serious! | ||
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| | #6 | ||
![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading Quote:
The chart from your system looks very interesting. It seems to me you are using some simple cross average at short time frame in your automated trading system. I'm wondering how the system performs at choppy market conditions. Do you leave your system operate overnight or you just have it operated during regular trading hours? I guess sometimes the overnight spike may bring big trouble for an automated system if the system is not designed very well in this aspect. Since you said that ''...no discretionary trader can come close to duplicating these results...'', I'm curious to know what's the return/drawdown of your totally automated system during its life span. Frankly speaking, I really doubt it can beat a good discretionary trader. Thanks. | ||
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| | #7 | ||
![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading | ||
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| | #8 | ||
![]() | Re: Discretionary Trading vs Automated Trading Quote:
I don't want to know the rules. I just want to know the results (return, profit/loss ratio, drawdown, etc.) if you are willing to share. No matter what approach/method/system adopted, ultimately only the results can be the final judge. | ||
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