First I would like to tell you that I really appreciate what you write and I agree with you. Also the way you “discuss” is refreshing. I feel intuitively, but also based on my +20 years of experience, that you are one of (the very few) people on ET who knows what he is talking about.
But I only have limited abilities and have to use them at max to survive. So what you tell that should be done is for me impossible. I am too stupid for that. And I have learned not to show or share my real performances with anybody.
After the story you told, I would like to tell you also a story.
Trader A is trading the ES for +10 years profitable now. After struggling for more than a decade to survive and to become profitable.
He started with a modest capital. As he saw that his system appeared to have lots of winning trades and very few losing trades he did not have to invest 10,000 ’s of dollars. He noticed that even with a small capital he would quickly generate decent profits, especially because he was going to use compounding.
He also realized that he could blow up. One more reason why he started with a modest capital. This gave him the opportunity to blow up his account 10 times in a row without ever harming himself financially. He said to himslef: “If you have a good system start slow, you will be millionaire a little bit later than planned, but if ever it turns out bad you will at least not completely wipe out from start.”
As his backtests showed him that he, on average, gave back less than 10% of the generated monthly profits in losing trades he could trade with an aggressive leverage. Therefore he was always reinvesting his total profits in new trades, but with 1 limitation: When a stop was hit (3 points ES) he had to be able to do the next trade with the same size as the losing trade. This to prevent that he should make big returns to recover small losses (like lose on 3 contracts and then try to recover on 2 contracts).
Backtests showed him that weekly profits almost always went over 100% of the initial invested capital. This was partially due to the relative small size he traded. So he decided to reset his account to the initial starting capital end of every month, or sometimes sooner if profits skyrocketed (some weeks could be huge will others could be very small, depending on what the market offered).
The result was that the first week was the most dangerous one, but even if the account would be wiped out there would be no problem at all and he would start over again. The possibility to wipe out his account 10 times in a row were, and still are, almost non existing. I never heard of a trader that wiped out 10 times in a row. And even then the damage would be small compared to the total net worth of trader A.
But he survived the first month, and his real results were in line with the backtests, he had +16 times his starting capital. Resetting it to the initial starting capital gave him a financial backup that allowed trader A to wipe out 15 times in a row and still have his starting capital.
After a few months trader A saw that the system performed well, and as he had already generated a decent amount of money he decided to double his initial starting capital, generating double the profits he had before. After trading 1 month with the higher starting capital his profits were again like when he started to trade. He could again put away 15 times the initial starting capital, but this time that capital was double from the previous one. Trader A was very happy now, could live good, but he would never be a billionaire. But trader A was more interested in quality of life then in a stressful life with capital he probably could not handle emotionally and maybe also psychologically.
Trader A still does not know if he was lucky or had the necessary knowledge and skills. He did around 5,000 trades which would logically be enough to show it was not just luck. Luck will not last 5,000 trades and 10 years of daytrading.
But he does not have to break his head on that anymore. It is for 100% sure he will never go broke because of the capital management he uses. The price to pay for that insurance was to give up the chances to become a billionaire. Becoming a billionaire would make trader A a very rich person on the graveyard, but with his actual profits he can do whatever he wants to do (within reasonable limits). So why make life complicated if you can keep it simple. The way trader A trades, took away all problems that a trader can encouter: stress, emotions, psychological problems, wipe outs…