More than 30 strategies. I have a separate account for each one - allows for easy performance monitoring.
More than 30 strategies. I have a separate account for each one - allows for easy performance monitoring.
not sure what you mean, can you clarify?have you analyzed the difference in overall return by keeping separate cash available for each strategy?
%%Actually, I've been thinking there are only two trading strategies - trend-following and reversals. So you either buy because price is rising, or you sell because price is rising. After this, the details are matters of timing (including pull-backs from trends) and finding the most recognisable dependable patterns etc.
I find it very difficult to trade full scale reversals, just doesn't suit my personality and risk tolerance. Though on a small scale I do trade reversals because I frequently look to buy into an uptrend after a short downwards pullback, so a kind of mini-reversal.


not sure what you mean, can you clarify?
no I don't do that. I just treat each account as an individual silo and money is not transferred back and forth. Wouldn't be easy anyway since accounts are spread across several different brokers/custodians. But I know what you mean - if I dynamically moved unused cash between strats it would multiply my returns several fold, but also the volatility. I prefer the silo method in order to maintain constant diversification, but lower returns.it depends on the intricacies of your situation including margin needed and used, holding periods (day or overnight), drawdowns expected, and the time each system trades. A simple example would be if you have 2 separate 100k accounts trading different day trading systems. One system trades US stocks, the other Japanese (opposite time the money is needed). Combine the 2 into one account since they can utilize the same money. If both are profitable, total return will go up on that 100k significantly -- espcially important if you are trying to build a track record. Now use the idle 100k for something else.