Partial TPs/Scaling out/Exit half, your thoughts?

,,,

Also it's psychologically easing as well, feels like I have made some money out of the trade already so BE/losing isn't as painful (I struggle a lot with profits vanishing) if anyone has anything that can help me with it, it would be awesome.
Correct. You have made my point
 
Not me. I'm "100% in/out"... with stops. To make any REAL money in the markets, you have to make large, unhedged bets... and be correct about them. Must use stops to control the downside when wrong. Rinse and repeat.

You can scale in/out, "pussy-foot" and hedge all you want. That will reduce you risk, of course. Will also reduce your gains. Pick your poison.
Correct.
 
Good points by everyone. I am thinking of partial profits because most of my losers are stopped at break even. Which leads me to think that I can take some profits off before they are stopped, this however causes my winners to have less profit since I exit halfway. Of course I have to test it out with stats

Also it's psychologically easing as well, feels like I have made some money out of the trade already so BE/losing isn't as painful (I struggle a lot with profits vanishing) if anyone has anything that can help me with it, it would be awesome.

I've traded a long time.

Much of my success has come from a relatively small percentage of plays/years. (Trading's version of the 80/20 principle). Almost all years, I've made OK/decent money... depending how you quantify that. But a few years, I made BIG money... at least for me... multi $MILLIONS. So... I preserve that and continue to keep trading enough to keep my wife in booze and shoes... don't need more than that.)

You can "play not to lose"... trying to make "some" while "hedging every which way".... and think "you're trading successfully" if you have small/modest gains. Or, you can go for real success. But to go for real success, you have to be cognizant of the downside for trading that way... and use stops when wrong. Always protect capital, live to fight another day.
 
Last edited:
Xela has kindly trailed my name in her post above and I think this is such an interesting subject - it focuses on exits and maximising profits, rather than the usual - which is entries and minimising risks.

I don't scale in and I don't scale out. However, I am adding a new full-scale trade to every winning trend-following trade. This is by stop order as soon as the initial trade hits break-even: as the new trade opens, with the same capital risk as the first, I move the stop on the first trade to b/e.

When the second trade opens I set another order for another trade at the same distance on. When that triggers, the existing trades's stops are pushed on again the same amount and a new order is set. Etc. etc.

Free margin pays for each new trade. If you don't have the margin, close the earliest trade and use its gain. If the trend fails, all stops will be hit simultaneously and all trades closed.

This is a great way to gain exposure to extraordinary profits at no additional capital risk. The sacrifice is firstly small early gains and secondly the top slice of unrealised profit from each stopped out trade.

Comments welcome of course.
 
I don't scale in and I don't scale out. However, I am adding a new full-scale trade to every winning trend-following trade. This is by stop order as soon as the initial trade hits break-even: as the new trade opens, with the same capital risk as the first, I move the stop on the first trade to b/e.


Not to appear pedantic, but this is the essence of efficient operation -- you are operating at the margin. You treat every entry, every addition-to-position, every piece-out, every exit, with an eye not towards what was previously engaged, but instead asking the question, "What's the best use of my capital right now??" That's just the sort of thinking that every econ department should *try* to inculcate to *every* student -- from Econ 101 way past those troublesome MBAs.:thumbsup:

Sunk costs are sunk. The right question to ask of your capital (or, your extant trades....)
 
Last edited:
I have done some calculations about this some time ago. Here's what I found roughly (without the numbers).

Profitability:
Scaling in > No scaling > Scaling out

Psychology difficulty:
Scaling in > No scaling > Scaling out

Risk:
Scaling in > No scaling > Scaling out

Volatility (Equity curve):
Scaling in > No scaling > Scaling out

It is up to you really. Another 2 most important factors to be taken into account are your winning rate and risk reward ratio. What's your average for those 2?
 
Speaking of "scaling in"... from Richard Dennis of Turtles fame....

He once said, "I scale in, but I do it so quickly as to be about the same as going all in at once".

IOW... there could be benefits to "scaling in", but not necessarily a correct play. However if the "scaling in" trade were to be correct, the 'all in initially' play would have been better".

Stated another way.... the correct analysis of the play is most crucial... how you play it is subjective.
%%
Good points; an advantage to scale in, maybe one gets someday big enough-where you have to scale in .....Another advantage, tops + bottoms are an area, never a single point except in hindsight:cool:
 
Back
Top