End of the year P+L

Quote from Ivanovich:

Heh...then you'd be able to work back to my account size :) Let's just say beteen 30 and 50%.

Let me guess.

You trade in 4 to 10 lot size trades, depending on the confidence level of the move?
 
Quote from Ivanovich:

So you're comparing me to Skalpz now because I was trying to explain the difference to someone unable to grasp it. That's nice.

You know what? The more I post on this board, the more I realize that it is stupid and worthless to do so.

EVERYONE who plays the market has an unrealized p+l. It represents positions simply not closed yet. If my unrealized p+l was -20,000 or something, you could make a stupid comment like you did. But it's not. It just represents a few positions that are in the negative and have not hit the stop loss yet. What am I supposed to do? Close them just because you want me to ignore that?

Whoa there, I really didn't mean for you to take things personally, my comment was on the realized/unrealized differentiation which ALL of us could improve by dispelling, because there is no difference between the two at all -- ie, not closing out or reversing a position just because an open loss exists, where one would act differently if he or she were flat. That is all.

I noted your year-end results earlier and gave you kudos you deserved. But I don't post stupid comments to be stupid and meant what I said; the more readily we drop the "unrealized" qualifier to any losses the better. Good trading and hope your new year brings the same. :)
 
Quote from illiquid:

Whoa there, I really didn't mean for you to take things personally, my comment was on the realized/unrealized differentiation which ALL of us could improve by dispelling, because there is no difference between the two at all -- ie, not closing out or reversing a position just because an open loss exists, where one would act differently if he or she were flat. That is all.

I noted your year-end results earlier and gave you kudos you deserved. But I don't post stupid comments to be stupid and meant what I said; the more readily we drop the "unrealized" qualifier to any losses the better. Good trading and hope your new year brings the same. :)

So, ALL of us could improve by dispelling the realized/unrealized differentiation? And drop the "unrealized" qualifier? Ah, not so fast. I must disagree with such sweeping generalizations. :)

If seeing "no difference between the two at all" works for you, great. More power to you. In my trading business, I am always keenly aware of a very tangible difference between realized and unrealized P&L. Here's a simple example: one of my forex strategies is based on a key, experience-derived belief that, given sound, high-probability entries and proper position sizing (read: modest leverage combined with scaling in), I am consistently able to extract profits (as in realized P&L) by cutting profits short and letting losses run.

Please read the last sentence again -- that's not a typo there. Yeah, it's the opposite of that beyond-heavily-promoted mantra we've all read a million times and can recite in our sleep... And I guarantee you that I am far from the only forex trader holding -- and practicing -- that belief. (Anyone interested to learn more can read "Bird Watching in Lion Country" by Dirk du Toit, for a different, unique perspective on forex trading.) Relatively substantial unrealized P&L on individual entries from time to time is an integral part of that strategy. It works.
 
Quote from illiquid:

Whoa there, I really didn't mean for you to take things personally, my comment was on the realized/unrealized differentiation which ALL of us could improve by dispelling, because there is no difference between the two at all -- ie, not closing out or reversing a position just because an open loss exists, where one would act differently if he or she were flat. That is all.

I noted your year-end results earlier and gave you kudos you deserved. But I don't post stupid comments to be stupid and meant what I said; the more readily we drop the "unrealized" qualifier to any losses the better. Good trading and hope your new year brings the same. :)

I understand why you posted what you did - even if I don't outright agree with you. But comparing anyone - whether directly or indirectly - to Coinz/Skalpz is insulting. You wouldn't like being compared to him.
 
Quote from late apex:

So, ALL of us could improve by dispelling the realized/unrealized differentiation? And drop the "unrealized" qualifier? Ah, not so fast. I must disagree with such sweeping generalizations. :)

If seeing "no difference between the two at all" works for you, great. More power to you. In my trading business, I am always keenly aware of a very tangible difference between realized and unrealized P&L. Here's a simple example: one of my forex strategies is based on a key, experience-derived belief that, given sound, high-probability entries and proper position sizing (read: modest leverage combined with scaling in), I am consistently able to extract profits (as in realized P&L) by cutting profits short and letting losses run.

I'm not sure how you've actually managed to rationalize open losses as "integral" to a strategy; I'm guessing you come from the 'It's impossible to time a random market so why try' school of thought and all the weirdness it entails *grin*. But I've no doubt that whatever strategy you use, you can achieve better results once you discard the crutch of open vs closed gains and losses.
 
Quote from Ivanovich:

I understand why you posted what you did - even if I don't outright agree with you. But comparing anyone - whether directly or indirectly - to Coinz/Skalpz is insulting. You wouldn't like being compared to him.

Sorry if it sounded like I did, it wasn't my intention and would be a pretty ridiculous comparison anyways.
 
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