BambinoFlex wrote:IgazI wrote:Are we doing 'the thing'? I was hoping for cheaper metal prices![]()
thoughts.png
Your pointy place will come.
I bumped up my gold holdings a smidge; better to do something than nothing at all

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BambinoFlex wrote:IgazI wrote:Are we doing 'the thing'? I was hoping for cheaper metal prices![]()
thoughts.png
Your pointy place will come.
IgazI wrote:BambinoFlex wrote:IgazI wrote:Are we doing 'the thing'? I was hoping for cheaper metal prices![]()
thoughts.png
Your pointy place will come.
I bumped up my gold holdings a smidge; better to do something than nothing at all
IgazI wrote:BambinoFlex wrote:Also, I finally understood what “Position” Means.
Or at least I think I do.
Position = Price Level That Holds my “Position” or “Risk” as some call it.
Similar to a stop loss, but difference is that as price moves in my favor, and I reduce my space, whilst adding more orders, my “position” won’t exceed my original risk
Eh? Yay or nay?
It is an ideal price, on a larger chart, that is within range of your risk tolerance.
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It (position) is an ideal price, on a larger chart, that is within range of your risk tolerance.
IgazI wrote:It (position) is an ideal price, on a larger chart, that is within range of your risk tolerance.
Price either breaks out and closes or breaks out and reverses. . .
"ideal" is any price from which you are trading, but not necessarily the price at which you made a trade.
"ideal" is a technically significant price on a chart.
When one "has position", on a particular chart, one can afford the price gap between the line and the current price.
ideal.png
BambinoFlex wrote:IgazI wrote:It (position) is an ideal price, on a larger chart, that is within range of your risk tolerance.
Price either breaks out and closes or breaks out and reverses. . .
"ideal" is any price from which you are trading, but not necessarily the price at which you made a trade.
"ideal" is a technically significant price on a chart.
When one "has position", on a particular chart, one can afford the price gap between the line and the current price.
ideal.png
Got it! The things you say definitely bring clarity in my trading processes.
In your experience, what scaling to a winning trade, what have you seen is more efficient?
1. Fixed limit orders at predetermined intervals
2. Waiting for a hook/pullback to scale into
I currently do #2, but at times, I miss the ability to fully scale into a trade because Im sleeping or there was a very fast move.