Quote from Yana:
All:
You often hear people say allocate no more than 5%/2%/1% of risk capital per trade. But when you read through market wizard type interviews, you find guys recounting their rags-to-riches stories of how they made it through a few big trades. e.g. between Druckenmiller and Soros:
"How big a position do you have?" he asked.
"One billion dollars," I answered.
"You call that a position?" he said dismissingly. He encouraged me to double my position. I did, and the trade went dramatically further in our favor.
Now ET community already has many discussions on Soros so no need to focus just on him. What I'm curious about is why these guys who made it through huge size trades tell people they should be very prudent with capital per trade.
Am I getting the wrong impression? Do the Pros size their trades like how people are suppose to or do they "go for the jugular" more often than they would like to admit?
What do you think?
It depends a lot on the process you use to identify trades, and where you lie on the spectrum between fundamentals/macro/investing and technical or systematic edge-grinding. Personally I base most of my trades strictly on technicals, but on those occasions where a technical setup triggers in line with my fundamental or macro beliefs (and this is of course only going to be on larger timeframes, daily+) I will certainly risk several times more than on a normal trade.
That said, these special cases represent only a tiny minority of trades: certainly less than 10%, maybe as little as 1%. For 99%+ of active or aspiring small retail traders it's far better to focus on robustness and sustainability over time. Be open to a blindingly obvious opportunity to bet somewhat more than normal (homebuilder stocks in 2007 for instance) but don't make it a centerpiece of your strategy to put everything on black hoping to emulate Soros.