Quote from NoDoji:
Where are you long from? Technically it looks way oversold, but then again the long term trend line broke out today and so anything can happen. I think you should follow whatever your plan was in the first place, even if it's painful.
Quote from NoDoji:
I think you should follow whatever your plan was in the first place, even if it's painful.
Quote from NoDoji:
I had a very losing short position once in a stock and I used a disaster stop at a price that it would absolutely never get to, and it got there, and I was stopped out, and it sucked because it erased a huge chunk of my year-to-date profits, but it saved me from a bigger loss.
The key words here are "when you're right".Quote from BCE:
Soros has taught me that when you have tremendous conviction on a trade, you have to go for the jugular. It takes courage to be a pig. It takes courage to ride a profit with huge leverage. As far as Soros is concerned, when you're right on something, you can't own enough.
Quote from the1:
Regardless of the fact that I'm not a Bazzillionaire I don't agree with this statement. Even when I've had "tremendous conviction" on a trade I've been flat out wrong. Going for the jugular could wipe you out when you are using leverage. That being said, position sizing in trading is critical to success but I'd rather go for the Portal Vein. If I'm wrong at least I got a chance of getting to the hospital before I bleed out.
Quote from Landis82:
You're not understanding the context of Soro's statement and trading methodology correctly.
He goes for the jugular and dramatically increases his position size WHEN THE MARKET TELLS HIM THAT HE IS RIGHT.
He doesn't just go in and take a huge position because he has "tremendous conviction".
He takes a position in tons of markets around the globe, and when the market takes his position into a profitable trend, he then ADDS to it.
The reason that I know this is because a very good friend of mine used to be his head financial futures / currency trader for nearly 15 years, and reported to Stanley Druckenmiller.
Quote from BCE:
I was going to point this out too. It's only when he's right that he that he steps it up. Not just because he has a strong hunch or feeling about market direction or position direction.
Quote from zxd:
I mean how much lower can it go?
Quote from BCE:
FWIW I couldn't disagree with this statement more. And your statement below points out why. Sometimes you're just wrong and your "plan" is not a good one. And the sooner you admit it, the less pain and destruction you'll suffer. This is true if your "plan" doesn't include a viable exit strategy if you are wrong. To not admit you are wrong is called "denial". And as was previously mentioned, "denial" is not a river in Egypt.
This is all of the stuff we've been talking about. I feel bad your trade is going so poorly. But the strategy of closing out half to buy back in lower and create a lower break even level can work but it's really dangerous to trade that way as we've pointed out. What if some other really bad fundamental news comes out that drives this considerably lower? Where will you exit? That's the problem with averaging into a losing position. A lot of times you "get away with it". But there are those times when it really goes against you and you run out of bullets. Or the pain is so great you just give it up and then feel really miserable at what you've done.Quote from zxd:
87.50 is where I'm long from, ouch. I just closed half out at 85.50, I'll buy the half back in if it declines some more. I mean how much lower can it go?
My post here is just as much a reminder to myself of what works well and what doesn't.So are you saying basically that you need to make sure you have good plans but you should stick to your plan no matter what? Just curious what your take is.Quote from NoDoji:
My plan for that particular trade (a swing trade) was to hold until the disaster stop or my profit target was reached. I believed that price would never get to that stop (which was quite dumb as I was still quite the noob at the time), but it was my pre-trade plan nonetheless.