Quote from Gabfly1:
Frankly, I know nothing about Kelly's size and I have no interest in finding out.
As for you guys with all of your numeric specificity, you might do well to consider Sebastian Mallaby's words on page 231 of his book, More Money Than God: "The real lesson of LTCM's failure was not that its approach to risk was too simple. It was that all attempts to be precise about risk are unavoidably brittle."
I disagree, here's why:
The fact of the matter is that LTCM's approach to risk was too simple because it did not account for all possibilities. Kelly can be very dangerous if you are not aware of or take into consideration all your risks.
Despite that, Kelly can still be used but you have to make sure that your set-up warrants using Kelly. Several posters have mentioned that you can't use Kelly because you don't always know your risk. I think they write that because they are thinking about the way that they trade which usually involves "stop losses" which may not be limited or other methods of controlling risk that may not be set in stone. Those may be good reasons to not use Kelly or at least not use full-Kelly.
But think of an option spread set-up where you can define your risk to the maximum of the spread, this is an example where Kelly can be used as long as your set-up has an edge or in other words, your set-up is profitable after a valid sample of similar trades in bull, static and bear markets.
Joe.