"Picture-Perfect" Trades the Computers May Miss

Talking Points:

  • The Value of Benchmarks and Validation

  • Real Proof About Computers' Limitations

  • 2 Classic Trade Set-ups Computers May Not See

Most intuitively understand that following a sensible, proven life regimen is the way to balance the conflict that sometimes arises between our logical side and our very human, emotional side. In trading, it is actually better to check emotions at the door, instead relying on the analytic, logical self.

And while logic coupled with automation will help temper our emotions, too much automation isn’t good, either. Recognizing our own strengths and the limitations of computer automation will help strike that balance and make for positive strides in trading.

A Plan

For traders, that “proven regimen” is called a benchmarked trading plan, and it will make the road ahead much easier. Without that black and white proof in hand, a trader likely won’t have the confidence needed to risk valuable capital on a daily basis.

A benchmark is a spreadsheet that shows the complete history of a method's trades in up, down, and sideways markets. It provides an abundance of useful information including that all-important win/loss percentage and risk/reward ratio.

This is the ultimate end game when it comes to market analysis, and it tells when a method is reliable enough to risk real money trading.

Statistical Validation

Once there is statistical proof that a particular trading method is working successfully (by way of the benchmark spreadsheet), it’s then possible to start demo or live trading that method with the goal of matching personal performance to that of the benchmark for the chosen time period.

Keep in mind it will be virtually impossible to match the benchmark because it is unlikely to be able to stay awake for days straight and manage every trade to the letter of the plan. For this reason, the benchmark is technically hypothetical (see Figure 1 below). It is a record of how to ideally initiate and manage trades, which is often different from the real outcome.

Guest Commentary: Benchmark Spreadsheet for Daytrading Method

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Fractals Limit Computers

If finding a viable trading method that provides desirable results in all environments were easy, everyone would have one. One of the largest drawbacks for aspiring traders is that they are relying on the computer for indicators. The fractal, or asymmetrical nature, of markets does not lend itself to being measured with technical indicators, which are, at best, secondary, or lagging indicators, of price itself.

The beauty of fractal design is that each new iteration, or pattern, is slightly different than the previous one. While the human eye is good at recognizing this pattern, a computer is not. The computer calculates symmetry, or exactness, in a world that is far from exact.