Hey guys,
My name is Steve. I am a long time BBT member. Over the years, I have tried and failed at day trading probably 3 or 4 times. I have never gone the traditional path of 'blowing up' an account, but I have never been able to be continuously profitable. I always seem to hover around breaking even or taking a slight loss. Where do I fail? Discipline. I tend to make a few good trades, and then one bad one that sets me back to square 1.
I've decided once again to give it another go. However, this time my main focus is going to be discipline. I'll be sharing all of my trades here with the community. This is mostly to hold myself accountable, but I also hope it provides some value to someone out there.
Here are a few rules I am putting in place for myself:
I am going to be trading one setup, and one setup only (more on this later)
I am going to trade EXTREMELY small. I am funding my account with $200 only. Most of my P/L is literally going to be in cents, not dollars. I don't care. I am purely making trades to make trades, and not even thinking about the money at this point. In fact, I have configured ThinkOrSwim to not even show my P&L during trades, and I have my account P&L hidden in the platform. The only time I will mention P&L is in my journal.
Because of the small account size, I will be subject to the PDT rule. I am viewing this as a good thing. It will force me to be super selective about what trades I enter. I expect there will be days where I won't make a single trade if I am not seeing my setup. If I find that I am really being hindered by 3 trades a week, I may consider bringing my account size up to $2,000 and converting it to a cash account. We'll see.
At the end of each month, if I am not profitable, I will reset my account back to $200. If I am profitable, I will add another $100 and allow myself to trade slightly more shares.
My setup:
After failing at day trading a few times, I started to look into swing trading instead, as I thought it may be a better fit for me. I read a few different books, but naturally gravitated towards Mark Minervini's 'Volume Contraction Pattern' style of trading (essentially just an ascending triangle trend continuation patter). For whatever reason, this setup just made sense to me more than a lot of others have, and I started to study it thoroughly. One of the interesting things that Mark Minervini mentions several times is that this pattern shows up and works on any time frame. I started to monitor stocks during the day on the 1-minute chart and started seeing this pattern show up over and over again. The best part, it's a setup that unfolds over a longer period of time, perfect for me trading while working a 9 to 5. Most of the setups come late morning or early afternoon as a trend continuation. I decided I would jump back in and give day trading another shot using this strategy.