Grinding it out, day after day

Quote from shortie:


in my example, lescor would have certainly be able to stomach 150K=3-4month profits.

sorry if i'm misunderstanding, but do you feel that stops would help prevent this? i have no numbers to back this up (and so i ask this out of sincere curiousity - not arguing one side or the other), but its seems highly likely that an event which would cause a stock to move >50% wouldn't cause a trading halt and massive gap. at which point, your stop may cause even more harm. no?
 
My advice would be to ignore Shortie, at least in this thread. He's just randomly pulling numbers out of thin air, when the reality is, he has no idea what he's talking about with regards to the situation. Complete and utter nonsense.
 
Quote from bs2167:

sorry if i'm misunderstanding, but do you feel that stops would help prevent this? i have no numbers to back this up (and so i ask this out of sincere curiousity - not arguing one side or the other), but its seems highly likely that an event which would cause a stock to move >50% wouldn't cause a trading halt and massive gap. at which point, your stop may cause even more harm. no?

i don't want to hijack lescor's thread more than i already have :). i did not say that stops would have improved his potential drawdown. i personally don't believe much in stops for RTM strats. -150K was an illustration of the kind of losses that are possible from just one trade given his position size.
 
Quote from DeltaSpread:

And was fortunate enough to lock up some top trench corp notes on the cheap with double digit yields for the next 20 and 25 years. In addition to this, I have incorporated a very responsible accumulation program as well going forward. My total annual returns will be in the neighborhood of 9-11% with basically no principle risk. When you factor in the compounding effect, I should get all my money back in like 12-15 years.

I can't help but think that if it were this easy to make 9-11% with little principle risk, then one would think the tens of thousands of banks, hedge funds, financial institutions, insurance companies, well-funded investors, financial advisors, sovereign wealth funds, and even state/local/federal governments would have thought of it before an individual saying he lost almost $200,000. In other words, it rarely works that way.

When one is so sure that you are seeing light at the end of a tunnel, it might actually turn out to be an oncoming train...
 
Quote from DeltaSpread:

Oh and don't feel too bad for me, last year I migrated into fixed income. And was fortunate enough to lock up some top trench corp notes on the cheap with double digit yields for the next 20 and 25 years. In addition to this, I have incorporated a very responsible accumulation program as well going forward. My total annual returns will be in the neighborhood of 9-11% with basically no principle risk. When you factor in the compounding effect, I should get all my money back in like 12-15 years. [/B]

I'm assuming you bet the ranch on these high-yielding corporates because you could layoff the default risk somewhere else?
 
Quote from shortie:

i don't want to hijack lescor's thread more than i already have :). i did not say that stops would have improved his potential drawdown. i personally don't believe much in stops for RTM strats. -150K was an illustration of the kind of losses that are possible from just one trade given his position size.

And what was my position size in this trade?
 
Quote from BeTheSparrow:


Can you tell me; what is your long vs. short ratio?

How do you maintain (do you maintain) a market-neutral mindset?

I'm generally pretty even long / short. I don't make guessing market direction part of my systems. If I want to indulge a hunch I'll put on a position with ES or SPY. But my guesswork isn't much better then anyone else's so I don't bet big.
 
Quote from lescor:

And what was my position size in this trade?

lescor, i am sorry. earlier i was talking out of my arse. for my earlier calculations to hold the stock had to drop 100%.

your position size was ~$150K of SWM or ~3000 shrs
 
Quote from TraderZones:

I can't help but think that if it were this easy to make 9-11% with little principle risk, then one would think the tens of thousands of banks, hedge funds, financial institutions, insurance companies, well-funded investors, financial advisors, sovereign wealth funds, and even state/local/federal governments would have thought of it before an individual saying he lost almost $200,000. In other words, it rarely works that way.

When one is so sure that you are seeing light at the end of a tunnel, it might actually turn out to be an oncoming train...

Maybe you read too fast through my details or I was not specific enough. Let me amplify a bit more. For the first six months of 2009, I accumulated nothing but high trench A level company quality bonds, like Prudential, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, SunAmerica etc. with various time frames between 15-25 years. I got them all at steep discounts below par because of all the market craziness at that time.

So take Prudential for example, I loaded these particular notes between 40 and 50 cents on the dollar with a 5.6% coupon. This gives me an actual annual yield in the mid teens. As long as I do not sell the bonds, I get this double digit return every single year until 2028 and at that time when they are redeemed at par I will also receive double my money back.

Now going forward from now I still only accumulate top trench A level bonds as well. But these yields will be in the 5.5%-6.5% range. When I extrapolate this though with what I already have accumulated that I detailed above; over the course of the next decade, it comes out to somewhere around 10% annually.
 
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