Hmmmm, I don’t ever give advice on actual trading systems or methods, but since you trade the same timeframes as I do on my intraday stuff then I will offer you at least some thoughts relating to this type of trading. But firstly, may I say that it was a good experience for you with last Friday’s NFP. It is perhaps the most volatile of all data releases and even if you have a stop of say 5-10 pips, you may not actually get filled until 20+ when the reactive move is so fast. I am so pleased for you that there was a retrenchment that allowed you to get out at a reasonable level. In the past, the reaction to NFP has initiated a new, longer trends that can last for days and move 100’s of pips. Perhaps another lesson for you last Friday was to experience the psychological stress of watching intensively a position that is dramatically under water relative to your usual trading size!
My first thought is that you are probably right to be relying quite heavily on your own discretion with these 15M/5M/1M timeframes instead of seeking a mechanical technical system. Price movements are, as you have already seen, quite erratic and change direction frequently without any observable reason. which leads to my second thought:
It is wise to keep commonsense about your decision-making regarding entry and exits and not chase the market whenever there is a sudden surge in price - it can return right back to where it was during the very next bar and leave you with an immediate minus or even stop-out.
Third thought, the typical trade distances in these TFs is about 5-25 pips if you are using the 1M to enter and exit. Therefore your stop-loss has to also be fairly close in order to be relative to your gains. This means that your entry levels are extremely critical to your overall success otherwise you will be getting stopped out too often by jittery price action. For this purpose I think it is good to use a technical analysis setup as a job aid (not as a system in itself). Personally, I think a 5-pip stoploss is far too tight. I would get stopped a lot if I used that level. I tend to set 10-15 pips and only enter positions when they are close to my exit criteria.
Fourth thought: In these TFs, the price often returns to the level that triggered the move after having moved maybe 8-10 pips in the right direction. Often, it is useful to wait for this pull-back before actually entering on a bounce-back from this level. The second move often has greater momentum and a quicker, longer move than the first leg, presumably because there is more interest from other participants with this confirmation.
Fifth point: These TFs are notoriously erratic and demand extreme concentration. They miss the longer moves and are expensive in broker costs. You will not make a lot of money from these trades but it is a brilliant training field for a trader to watch and learn price action and try out all kinds of technical analysis tool before moving onto longer term TFs and positions. In order to make meaningful money in these TF’s you would need to take large positions which would also mean that a series of losses would eat your equity VERY quickly AND add a lot of frustration to your trading.
Sixth point: It is worth watching the general level of activity on the 15M and 5M(e.g. bar lengths) before even deciding to trade on 1M signals otherwise you will be whipsawing around in a tight market going nowhere.
I am probably only stating the obvious here and sorry if it is boring for you, but maybe there are some points that may help you in developing your trading approach - Good Luck
Actually, I just noticed that you joined this site already in 2010 so I guess this is all kid’s stuff that I am talking about - I am sorry about that, I didn’t mean to appear to be belittling you at all!