Quote from austinp:
<i>"... just goes to show there really are as many ways to make money in this game as there are traders (and trading personalities) that do it."</i>
That is absolutely true. Every one of those consistently profitable approaches have one thing in common: greater reward than risk ratio over the course of time. That fact is irrefutable, and the key words are <b>over the course of time</b>.
The core difference between successful trading and gambling is long-term edge. A successful trader mimics "the house" by creating a statistical edge that endures all storms. A gambler tries to beat the house thru a sequence or series of wins before the inevitable streak of losses wipes out all previous gains.
See the difference? There is a slight but profound difference between trading and mere gambling. How we structure our trading approach makes that difference.
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A mechanical system or trend-following method may only have a 40%, 30% or 20% win ratio. The rest of time it endures controlled losses, but the winning trades far eclipse all losses. That approach is still has a "house edge" because over the course of time, big wins exceed all small losses.
Compare that to selling options, be it credit spreads or naked contracts. A trader can win 80% or even 90% of those trades, accumulating large strings of small to modest gains. However, eventually one or two large losses occur that wipe out all prior gains, and sometimes more than that.
Said trader has been lulled into a false sense of security by weeks, months, maybe even a couple of years' worth of steady gains in this approach. But sooner or later, "the house" comes knocking to collect its dues. Every time, no exceptions if you stay and play the game. That approach is mere gambling, regardless how it feels thru the temporary win streak.
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"You Can't Lose Trading Commodities" is an old book written by Robert West. That approach is exactly what Saxon is dabbling with, unbeknownst or not. Not much different than the approach Franz Schoar plied with IT and now presumably on his own.
For all those who attempt trading this way, it is nothing more than pure gambling. The edge is inverted = upside down against the trader. Periods of profitability lull traders into a false sense of security. A bunch of now inactive traders just learned that fact while building long trade scales in grains. A couple of limit-down moves always creates margin calls and devestated accounts.
Lesson learned, the hard way once again.
Try scaling down into long trades on the plunge in late Jan 2006 or Feb 27th 2007 and one might get it right. Make one mistake... just one and you are all done. One single trade in this scale trading approach can and often does end a career. It has ended literally 1,000s of trading careers in the past, and will continue to do so until trading ceases to exist.
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I could ramble on for a couple thousand more words here trying to belabor the point, but what's the point in that? Those who are open will hear the message, those who are not receptive (yet) have already clicked out of this thread. Besides, it is Saturday and I'm going fishing. Gotta have our priorities straight!
Trading = positive expectancy of risk to reward in favor of the trader over time... years and years thru all market conditions.
Gambling = positive expectancy of risk to reward for "the house" and against the traders over time... years and years thru all market conditions.
I'm not the best person to rattle off statistics in here. I'd defer that to atticus and others like him that trade off statistics. You can wake those guys out of a sound sleep, give them your stats and they'll tell you with mathematical certainty what odds are for success or lack thereof.
I can paint the ending of this story with a wider brush. Scaled trading emini contracts minus VERY DEEP pockets with ability (and expectancy) to endure large losses at times is a doomed approach. Period, end of story. That is not mere opinion, it is a mathematical fact. Temporary evidence to the contrary, i.e. a period of profitability does not change reality in the end. Time always tells.
Good news is, trading with the intraday trend is one helluva lot simpler and tremendously more profitable. Friday's session offered at least +8pts to +16pts ES to any skilled intraday trader who <b>works with directional bias</b> of the market. That may be the same direction all day, it often changes several times per day. Regardless, trading in harmony with price action rather than against is far safer and profitable over the course of time.
Why step in front of freight trains trying to scoop up 1pt net when we can instead ride the train and fill pockets with ten times that?