Expect More Choppy Action

I’ve
been talking a lot about the power
of 15-period Moving
Averages in my early columns, and this morning provided an
excellent example of their power as trend support and reversal
indicators for intraday traders. Specifically, the three-minute 15
MA provided an excellent trend pullback opportunity on the early
retracement at 9:50 a.m. ET. The morning also reinforced the
lesson of not selling into the initial retail panic fueled by the
low-volume futures gap down and all of those wonderful market
sell-at-open orders on the overnight
(
AMCC |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating)
news. I’m
continuing to expect tight ranges and choppy action today as we
prepare for the FOMC, yet have admittedly been looking more for
long opportunities, given the overnight overreaction.

Tuesday 
June 26, 2001  10:55 AM EDT

The
“Daily Goal” Dilemma

Yesterday’s consistency chart generated some good after-hours
discussion with respect to targets. In particular, a few asked me
whether, as an intraday trader,  I have a daily income target.
My answer is a flat-out
“no,”
and I strongly believe that having such a short-term goal is
highly counterproductive for a trader. For example, while I do
have longer-term weekly and monthly income targets, whether or not
I attain a daily “goal” or am even positive each day is
absolutely irrelevant, just as whether or not I’m profitable on
every trade is irrelevant and unrealistic.

While most folks seem
to be able to accept not having a per-trade objective, I find that
many still strive to attain some profit level every day and will
push at times when they’re unfocused, out-of-sync, or when the
market is more or less stagnant — as is typically the case during
many of the summer dog days. As Dave Landry said yesterday, “Why
fight it?”

In yesterday’s consistency chart, you’ll see that my target for
profitable days each month is around 75%, which may, at first
glance, seem low. Yet it is the monthly income stream that
is most relevant to me, and the 75% reflects that fact that I
expect to have drawdown days where the market fails to provide
high probability intraday setups, I’m not trading particularly
well, or technical problems occur, etc.  In fact, I’ve found
higher % targets result in lower income streams as the result of
what I’ll call “trading on eggshells.”

One particular negative of having a daily goal is stopping for the
day once one reaches it. Doing so would result in the trade-like
error of inappropriately cutting one’s gainers, this time on a
daily basis, essentially turning the target into an earnings
“cap.” This month’s income distribution provides a good
example, using results vs. a daily average (not target) as
reference points:

Just
as with trades, days where the daily average is exceeded are
essential to overcome the expected drawdowns and generate a
sustainable income stream.  Many businesses have the 80/20
rule, where 80% of the revenue comes from 20% of the customers,
which certainly applies to our business…and yes, I consider
trading a serious business.  So while I do track % of time
periods profitable using the objectives below, I do so only to
gauge consistency as bottom line is the name of the game.

Personal
% Profitable Targets

100%

90%

75%

Totally Irrelevant

Months

Weeks

Days

Trades

Good
trading!

Don Miller