Quote from faure:
if the market goes up i sell. if it is up more the next day i sell again and so it continues, all the while taking profits on earlier longs, until the market drops. i then take profits on the short while simultaneously buying on the way down. then when it goes up again the cycle repeats itself.
that's the basis of it all but like i've said there more to it.
faure
Quote from TriPack:
Here is something I've been puzzling over, that hopefully someone here will be able to help me with. I'm demoing a 5% position size on 6 different currency pairs. I thought using a fixed % on each currency pair would keep the position sizes in relative parity with each other for hedging and overall account balancing (same amount risked / gained on each pair for an equal pip move) but I'm not so sure anymore.
Here is what is happening on a recent demo trade with a 5% default position size:
Buy GBP/USD: 875 units
Buy USD/CHF: 1610 units
In this case if both pairs have a 100 pip move, the GBP pair will achieve roughly half the gain or loss achieved with the CHF pair. whereas if I had used a standard like 1200 units and each pair had a 100 pip move, the gain or loss by each would be in better parity.
I guess using a standard % for default order size assumes that currencies that trade at a premium to the USD (in this case GBP) will tend to be symmetrically more volatile than currencies that trade at a discount to the USD (like CHF). Perhaps this is true but I'm not sure.
Quote from ElectricSavant:
There are words being used here:
- NAV
- Balance
- Unrealized P/L
- Realized P/L
- Margin Call
- Leverage
- Margin Used
- Margin Available
- Margin Percent
- Position Value.
What the heck is the trade ticket percent setting calculating?...it does not match with ANYTHING and Oanda Customer service does not know!
Michael B.
P.S. Perhaps it is better to use the traditional stuff of money management. I just liked putting it on automatic from trade to trade...but until I can have this explained to me in "plain speak", I just don't know.
Quote from ElectricSavant:
faure,
There must be more to it. If you pull up some of these 10Y histories, this would scare you to see the 5 year trends IN ONE DIRECTION. You say electric, why do you care about those ten year trends? I say, this is a carry strategy and YOU MUST.
All the baggagge carried of the open trades regardless of today's profits must be mind boggling...all I can think of is how much would I have needed to use discretionary techniques and money mangement to increase the accelerations necessary to keep up with that long pool widening trend. Then I am so thankful for the dwstart. But he says only use 1Y ranges, I just don't get it.
Michael B.
Quote from ElectricSavant:
faure,
There must be more to it. If you pull up some of these 10Y histories, this would scare you to see the 5 year trends IN ONE DIRECTION. You say electric, why do you care about those ten year trends? I say, this is a carry strategy and YOU MUST.
All the baggage carried of the open trades regardless of today's profits must be mind boggling...all I can think of is how much would I have needed to use discretionary techniques and money management to increase the accelerations necessary to keep up with that long pool widening trend. Then I am so thankful for the dwstart. But he says only use 1Y ranges, I just don't get it.
Michael B.