Today is Friday February 12, 2012 where the market had a very large opening gap to the downside. We later stabalized and mounted a couple of rallies, to get some of the losses back.
The daily market is still in an uptrend and it would appear that we could see slightly higher prices or at least not any lower prices than today’s low as per the S&P emini futures.
In today’s trading I did well at roughly 2 to 3 times my daily goal. A couple of trades I came in early, but did see clearly what was coming, a strong benefit from being able to read the price action. If one waits for that trading edge, you have very little to worry about as you will be looking at green right after entry, which is always a good feeling. Let me post my trades from today below, before I carry on to much further.

Acting on “The Trading Edge”
Day trading is a great way to make a living. You have the free time after you have your points for the day to go and enjoy other things life may have for you. There is more to life than trading, but I don’t want to try and convince anyone about that. We are all different and have different dreams and goals.
To make the dream become a reality, every trader needs to have a “trading edge”. Without it, you will be left with guessing and that is no way to move into this venture. It then becomes more like a gamble and the odds are really then no better. It is possible to come out on top most trading days, but you really need that personal trading plan that is combined with a solid trading method. If you don’t have both, you are leaving it up chance.
Creating your Trading Plan
A personal trading plan is important and is I believe different than your trading method. That plan, is all about you. It is tailored to your goals, your time invested, your objectives in point totals as they relate to time invested in the markets. These are all separate from the trading method you trade. Many may not have thought about it that way and that is why I mention it today, for your benefit.
Every trading method is unique to the one using it. I know that my method, “Sniper Day Trading” is no different. I trade differently than many of my members, but that does not make one better than the other. I like to scale out of trades and don’t mind getting out a little early on some, to make it a little easier to stay in for more.
That is different, in that there are those who like to go, “all in”, “all out” and that is OK. Thus, my point for having a personal trading plan as it relates to the time you have to sit in front of the screen each day.
If you really want to take fewer trades, but want a higher risk to reward ratios, then you will have to exercise your patients and wait and wait. If you can do that with no problem, that is great. Many times traders can do better by taking fewer trades but for bigger returns. If you can sit through the down time, then a different plan may be better for you. That is why this part is tailored to you and your trading strengths.
There is a lot of controversy over good risk reward ratio’s, but the one that counts is the one that you can do consistently and be profitable with. I don’t think it is a good idea to trade for anything less than a 1:1 trade ratio, which just means that your risk is equal to your reward on any given trade. It does not have to be a totally hard rule, but it should make up the bulk of your trades as such, or better.
In the Sniper Day Trading method, I do have that trade ratio present or better. I will risk 1 point for 1 point at times, and that is fine, because I know if it is good method setup, I will hit it most often. Two of those and that could be a conservative daily goal for some.
Being able to read the market in a pure price action way, is really where you will find that “trading edge”. Getting good at it will instill confidence and give you the courage to put the trade on without fear. If you do experience trading fear, before you pull the trigger, you need to settle down and practice a bit longer.
Trading from a position of fear will take your edge away and you will be reactionary at best. It only gets worst from there, when you have highly charged emotions in the game. Separate yourself from the money and focus on doing the right thing. Don’t worry about the results. Try and shorten your targets to help instill that winning frame of mind and don’t worry if the move goes higher from there.
Be sure you have a daily stop point, if you are not trading well. Never let a modest days loss become a wipe out. You are the one that has control over that and it will keep you alive for another day when more favorable market conditions are present.
Day Trading is very personal to each participant. It can be one of the hardest things you have ever done, but you can choose to make it easier on yourself by getting educated, put time on your side to practice and instill confidence and create your personal trading plan that will put over the top. I hope this advise will help some on their journey.
Trade well, trade committed! Vince