have always gone for straight futures contracts, CFD, s and there spreads just don’t appeal plus Futures are exchange traded which I believe CFD, s are not.
I don’t use technical to a great extent, more look for patterns as set-ups, also note daily pivots and areas of support/resistance were there has been allot of activity.
I only really trade the Spi in this way but will have a go at the Taiwan Index that trades in Singapore, its very liquid and only US$10 per tick.
IB charge $5 per side for the Spi and it moves in $25 ticks, Data is free as are there charts (pretty basic though), and yes I think $10K is the minimum to open an account, same as most Futures brokers.
Try an internet search on pattern trading, also books by the likes of Larry William cover these types of topics, but really do your own research and watch the market.
Cheers
Pager
SevenFX,
If you are just starting out trading index futures, no intra-day timeframe will help you. It won't matter if you use 1m, 2m, 20, 30min 60min.
you need to learn to read a chart, you need to trade longs from lower opens from support and you need to trade shorts from higher opens from resistance, you need to define trends, and if possible always trade 2 lots.
You need exit strategies and plans. i.e if market moves 30-40 points I exit and don't trade again, and/or I hold my 2nd lot in EOD or overnight.
Intra-day timeframes are just noise.
Learn to chart-read, you'd be surprised how many use technical analysis but still can't chart read and resort to a plethora of intra-day price based indicators that always give false moves and lag price action, especially the shorter the timeframe.
Always identify support and resistance.
The market intra-day doesn't move in timeframe wave patterns, the market doesn't care about 5 minute charts or 10 min charts, and If you are trading with the spread of 3-4 points using CFD's, focus on bigger moves in the market or you're going to be slowly chewed and spewed.
Those who use intra-day timeframes have just been accustomed for many years using short-term timeframes so they feel naked if they don't have a 1 minute chart in front of them.
If you don't look at a intra-day chart and instead learn to 'feel' the market and chart read using higher timeframes, you'll go a long way in becoming a much better trader.
Profit will always come to those who have the ability to hold a winning position longer, but when you start trading 1minute charts you'll often end up exiting a position because of the noise factor.
Just my opinion.
Frank
Think it's irrelevant what time frame you are using, it's more important deciding stop strategy for the trading strategy you are using.If I use 5 min chart to day-trade SPI, are 5 point stop loss and 10 point trailing stop too narrow?
What do you advise?
Franks nailed a lot of points that need to be addressed.
I trade stock,but even so Franks points are very pertinent.
Cutting out noise is very important,you need to have a timeframe which is long enough to cut out the noise.
This will depend on the amount traded over a period.
For stock trading slow volume stock in smaller timeframes is pointless.
Some however can be traded like MGX which is being traded (Now daily) from a 60 min chart.(On "The Chartist Forum")
EGO which I'm trading in the "E" thread has lots of volume but very little range so anything under a 120 bar is pretty meaningless.Infact Id sugest its not one to trade using shorter term charts.
You need a timeframe where you can see clear technical patterns,support/resistance,Range and volume on each bar mean something.
I prefer 15 min charts for timing in well supported stock and 60 min charts once the stock has some profit.I'll even stretch that to daily if there is enough open profit in it and the daily analysis supports a trading plan in that timeframe.
Hope that is a bit of help.
Great points there TH. Very True.To say one particular time frame or chart period should not be used is just plain wrong.
What are you saying? Think about it. What I see is the only way? That people who scalp off the DOM or 1 minute charts are getting lucky off noise??
Input from others can be helpful but should never be taken as the only way. I think a big reason this game is so hard to learn is that newbies try and imitate a type of system that doesn't suit there personality.
A hell of a lot of what I trade are SPI scalps off the 1 minute chart. I will take profit seconds to minutes later at the target of around 4 to 10 ticks with a 4 tick stop loss. I can do this if the day is suited to that style up to 20 times a day or more with a very high success rate. When I'm on song I can take many times the days range, far more than someone looking for an all day move. At times I'm kicking myself when it continues to run and I have already taken my profits like today. But after many years of trying to copy other peoples "system" I have found the one that suits my head and am now taking money out of the market consistently.
For me the ultimate trading system has two parts.
1. A positive expectancy after brokerage and slippage.
2. Produces many trading signals so as to exploit to the maximum your capital
What is one persons noise is another's persons path to riches.
I’m confused here….
We have tekmann trading futures on CFDs with a spread of 3-4 points. (original question)
But we have Trembling Hand that trades the SPI using a 4-10 point exit rule and a 4 point stop.
Using my math, I would say SevenFX will go broke using this method, I’m not sure if others agree, but I would think this would be the case.
So instead of generalizing this entire topic, I would be extremely interested and I’m sure tekmann would also be interested in seeing a 1 minute chart using your method, so that he can then make a conclusion of whether trading a ‘scaplers’ way will suit him, or will it be more beneficial to trade larger trends whilst he is trading CFD’s.
We still don't know SevenFX's personaility, only he can make up his mind which one will suit him.
A simple chart and explanation of how you’re trading style can beat the ATR of the SPI. Let’s use a lower ATR of the SPI of around 60 points. (ATR is currently around 90 points)
Frank
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