Quote from RoughTrader:
In a very general sense, I feel scaling in does not provide much benefit.
Let's say you want to take on a position with 3 contracts. Without scaling in, the worst case loss is simply
Loss = 3 * Stop Loss Amount
However, as you are scaling in, your entries become farther into the position, and hence farther away from the stop loss. Your worst case stop can be much more than the above loss, assuming the profit target or stop-and-reverse point was never hit.
And yes, I understand that there will be times where the position will be stopped out with a favorable excursion less than the various scale-in locations, and these smaller losses will mitigate the effect of the larger losses accrued by a favorable position reversing itself into a loss.
This neutralizing effect becomes apparent when you backtest these types of entry techniques.
This is just what I have observed in my own research, others may find differing results.
RoughTrader
as i mentioned above, i am looking at a different form of scaling-in, entering against the current price movement.
however, this second mention of scaling into trend has prompted me to take a fresh look at the Turtle rules.
it's very interesting, according to the rules, the Turtles scaled in equal increments and had the same stop loss for each scale-in piece.
so, they kept a constant level of risk for each scaled entry, which is what i am assuming as a goal, i.e. i am not seeing a rationale (or i don't have one) to increase / decrease risk (or risk / return for that matter) during the process of scaling.
hence, what i am concluding is that the goal is to keep a target level or risk (and/or risk/return) and then assume a probability distribution and solve for the scale-in size which maintains the desired level of risk.