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- Warburg replied Oct 23, 2017
VEE, I do appreciate your kind words. It appears we're reading from the same page. I mention the word 'variables' a lot, but the longer I'm in this game, the more I believe that this word needs to dominate our thinking. Again, with all of these ...
- Warburg replied Oct 22, 2017
I've read this thread with great interest. But many times I think that even with our great minds and intellect, we are unable to capture the plethora of all the 'variables' that are factored into this market every minute of every day. In example, I ...
- Warburg replied Aug 30, 2017
You don't really have a clue do you?
- Warburg replied Mar 6, 2017
It will take most traders years upon years to discover that absolutely nothing placed on a trading chart will have any significance whatsoever on a moving price. It is the biggest fallacy ever perpetrated on the investing public.
- Warburg replied Dec 14, 2016
I repeat once more - There is nothing, absolutely nothing that can be placed on a chart, including indicators, trend lines, computer generated signals, or anything else that can have any effect or significance whatsoever on a moving price - period. ...
- Warburg replied Dec 10, 2016
There is nothing, absolutely nothing you can place on a chart, including indicators, trend lines, computer generated signals, or anything else that can have any effect or significance whatsoever on a moving price. Period. I personally believe that ...
- Warburg replied Jul 24, 2016
'Trend Following' as a trading methodology will be one of the most difficult strategies mentally speaking, that you will probably ever encounter as a trader. However, I personally believe the time and effort to structure such a method is well worth ...
- Warburg replied Dec 19, 2015
It's obviously your money - you spend it any way you want to. But 'hidden divergence' is actually a fallacy. There are a lot of experienced traders on here that will tell you the same. You're trying to convert a 'variable' into a 'constant' and it ...
- Warburg replied Nov 10, 2015
Bilstein - they just don't understand.
- Warburg replied Oct 21, 2015
You don't need me to tell you, but from a position of 12 years full-time trading and 30,000 hours of trading screen time - you're doing it right.
- Warburg replied Jun 26, 2015
My personal opinion is that the market is random with structure - meaning that a small percentage of the time a majority of traders are all observing the same market structure to the extent of forming a probability of a particular outcome (a ...
- Warburg replied Jun 24, 2015
Simply put, traders basically fall into a category of either "waiters" or "followers" in their trading methodology. If you're a 'waiter', you're choosing your entries and exits based on things you personally are 'waiting' on. These may be support & ...
- Warburg replied Jul 30, 2013
Read Post 19 again and accept it for that's just the way it is. Someone mentioned support and resistance. Looking at this or any a number of (indicators) and my first question to you is "What time frame are you talking about?" As we all know - one ...
- Warburg replied Jul 30, 2013
Statisticians have gone back over 60 years examining distribution curves for all markets traded. The results - the markets are indeed random, at least to the extent of ever predicting the next candle. I personally like to say that the market ...
- Warburg replied Oct 14, 2012
It's All There — If I may remind us of something we've heard many times before - if I have a system that produces 100% positive results and I show it to you, piece by piece, you may take this same system and fail miserably with it. Why? ...
- Warburg replied Oct 5, 2012
Speaking of Driving — One of the most important lessons I've acquired after nine years of trading is the realization of "constants" and "variables" when trading. In continuing with the ongoing theme - occasionally when driving in town, you ...
- Warburg replied Jun 30, 2011
For The New Trader — Through my trading career, I have created formulas, invented algorithms, bent lines, designed the most sophisticated of indicators, developed EAs, utilized robots, and mixed a plethora of strategies and methodologies. ...
- Warburg replied May 14, 2011
Standardization — Mr. Nub is right on target. I found out years ago that the #1 factor that makes trading difficult is "time frames". Most traders look at their chosen time frame and make decisions based on what they see. As we all know, one ...
- Warburg replied Nov 12, 2010
Waiting Versus Following — I am somewhat hesitant to break the continuity of someone else's thread with my out-of-the box mindset, however, I believe that every trader has to determine whether they trade "in waiting" or trade "in following" in ...
- Warburg replied Nov 12, 2010
DazzDude - 1-Hour Candle — I spoke with a very accomplished trader several years ago, who at that time, had completed 476 positive trades in a row. Searching for insight, he agreed to give me a million-dollar tip - DON'T EVER TRADE AGAINST THE ...