Questions for experienced daytraders

Quote from Dustin:

I've made a living off much less. 70% would be a dream.

Slippage , hft , commissions, spreads widened, liquidity issues and other insufficiency of the trader will result in a non profitable outcome for most using marginal edge.
 
Quote from Smart Money:

Thanks for the reply. I do get that you shouldn't add to a losing position...but I don't get why anyone would delay adding to a winner.

Lets say you were playing the ES, and you bought one contract at 1400, at 1401 it was looking good so you add another contract, and at 1402 things started turning sour so you sold.

So you earned 2 pts on one contract and 1 point on the second....for a total of 3 points. But you could have earned 4 from jumping in there from the beginning. The win was watered down.

And arguably, the second contract is riskier because you're buying in later in the run...there are less ticks to go before it reverses, right? So you're ramping up risk.

What am I missing?

SM

If the market became choppy/random for an extended period of time , your second and subsequent positions will lose all your profits , and end up in a negative situation.This sort of occurrence will create psychology and other issues.These other issues are more difficult to handle.

http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?threadid=218977
 
Quote from Smart Money:

Here's my 2 cents:

Don't trade unless you're pretty sure that you're going to make money. And then stay in it until you're pretty sure you're going to lose money. Maybe be more skittish about jumping out...first sign of trouble and you're out.

"Pretty sure" should be about 90% system, and 10% gut feel.

Why do I say this? Because you either have an edge or you don't. If you don't, no manipulation of the size of your bet is going to help you. And if you do have an edge, then why on earth wouldn't you want to get all the benefit of it?

IMHO, you should be all in when you get in and when you get out, get out. Manipulation of the odds comes from your system.

But last of all...play an amount that is right for the all in, all out, strategy.

You could come up with a cash handling strategy on a coin flip. Like with 50/50 odds, when you lose, double the next bet to get your money back. They look good on paper, but eventually, such strategies will end up blowing out your account because eventually you'll be in a position of betting half your funds to win back a little bit of money. The cash handling strategy can't help you because the win percentage isn't high enough...so find a system that wins more than 50% and then play it as often and as much as you can.

I'm open to hearing anyone refute my statement here. Explain to me how parsing a winning strategy makes sense or how you can parse a losing strategy to success through money management. Seriously, I'm open to hearing it. I do get that profitability is win percentage times return on a win vs. loss percentage times return on a loss (i.e, 30% of the time you double your money and 70% of the time you lose half....that is not what I'm talking about). I'm saying if you have a edge...say a situation wehre you'd make more money winning than losing, why would you want to water it down at any point? Sorry for the rant, and I hope I'm not hijacking here, but I'd really love an intelligent answer....it might help me be a better trader.

SM

+1

You will go far.
 
Quote from CheckM8t:

Knowing that once a daytrade is put on, there is roughtly a 50/50 chance of price moving in the right direction, and any trade can last from a few seconds to a few hours. I'm lookeing for some ideas on trade management, once my strategy signals an entry.

Has experience shown that entering a trade with the full position on at time of entry, (then lightening the position if the trade starts going against you and maintaining the full position if price moves in the right direction) is more effective than entering a trade with a partial position, then increasing size as price moves in the right direction?

All constuctive responses are appreciated.
The correct answers are -
(1) no trade is worth entering if its true probability is 50/50, particularly so for the amateur and
(2) you can add to a position (using care: scaling up buying on upward price direction and scaling down selling on downward price direction) but NEVER as a sole amateur trader scale down buy or scale up sell (however frequently though this may be done by other ETers).

You can lighten a position if price has already gone in your direction but it is not usually necessary to do so. Conditions where professionally you might do this are, giving examples, when you are 'unstacking' a very large position or where part of a winning position is always liquidated under a formulaic strategy. But this is not for amateur players.

Lets cut to the chase. If you use one lot (futures markets) or a small position to trade, lets assume a volatile market (eg CL) using the daily price gyrations to trade the successive swings. Take a slower chart. Use 2 signals (triggers): fast and slow. Take the fast signal for entry. If it doesn't go on (subject to any condtions you have for it) take the slower signal next. Exit/reverse on the counter-signal (same procedure). Note: if the entry signal was a buy, then of course the counter-signal is the next sell signal.
:)
 
Quote from Rationalize:

If the 50/50 problem is not solved, then all else is irrelevant .. "money management" or not.

No one wins a coin flip game.

Novice argue about keeping tight stops of 5 to 8 pips, and aim for rewards of 20 to 30 pips.They dream they have an edge and boast about it.Those using 20 pip stops have higher % hit rates than 5 to 8 pips stop users based on Statistical data, in fact most of these tight stop strategies are less profitable than wide stop strategies, some of them become losers due to tight stops.
 
Quote from oilfxpro:

Great theory in it?

that ain't theory... that's CL trading the only way possible

anyone who thinks they can make it there scalping 20 cents with 70% win rates will be a perennial donor until all their money runs out for the final time
 
Quote from oilfxpro:

Twice the profit target reduces hit rate to zero sum result.Go do some statistical analysis on historic data.

It is all about probabilities.

If I've conducted extensive research and defined setups that produce at a minimum twice the profit as the risk defined by my protective stop 50% of the time, how does that create a zero sum result?

:confused:

Quote from oilfxpro:

A 50/50 system days trading system can not make you money. , you need a 70% winners/30 % losers method to make you money

Even a 10/90 system can make you money. It's about researching the setups you want to trade and finding the levels that produce profit consistently over time IF (ah, there's the rub) you trade all the setups every day. Say your strategy involves "fly fishing" to catch the one or two strong trend days that occur each week. Your average loss is .10 and your average profit on a trending run is 2.00. You average 9 losses for every trending winner you capture. You're nicely net profitable despite a terrible win rate.

What makes you think having a 70% win rate will make you money? What if, for some reason, you're emotionally unable to trade every setup? I had a 70% winning strategy in place for months before I got to the point that I traded every setup. I worked with a trader who couldn't bring himself to trade this system. He wanted certainty in a field of uncertainty and probability.

Quote from oilfxpro:

Those using 20 pip stops have higher % hit rates than 5 to 8 pips stop users based on Statistical data, in fact most of these tight stop strategies are less profitable than wide stop strategies, some of them become losers due to tight stops.

Can you provide a link to some kind of study or studies proving this?

I used stops of 15 to 20 ticks trading CL and 6E and a trader joined my Skype room who used stops of 6 ticks trading 6E. That was his max stop on any trade. I didn't believe it. He didn't tell me exactly how he traded, but he dropped a hint or two about what he looked for.

I studied like crazy, began to notice certain patterns and I finally figured it out. I now frequently have trades with stops of 4 to 7 ticks and the impact on profitability has been quite positive. On one setup I trade, the entry method that allows the tiny stop provides me an additional 10-15 ticks of profit.

"Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it." - James Baldwin

Quote from Smart Money:

Why do I say this? Because you either have an edge or you don't. If you don't, no manipulation of the size of your bet is going to help you. And if you do have an edge, then why on earth wouldn't you want to get all the benefit of it?

IMHO, you should be all in when you get in and when you get out, get out. Manipulation of the odds comes from your system.

I'm saying if you have a edge...say a situation wehre you'd make more money winning than losing, why would you want to water it down at any point?

I'm with you 100%, and that's why I'm all in/all out on my trades. Why take off half and leave the other half on to see if the market has more to offer? So I'm risking full size and then risking giving up half my profit by holding half a position beyond the point where price is telling me to take profit. Why not take all the profit (keeping my edge fully intact), then get back in if price demonstrates the market has more to offer?
 
Quote from austinp:

example: ten trades per day in CL, -20 cent initial stop seeking +100 cents profit objectives break down like this:

5 stopped at 0 cents
3 stopped at -20 cents each (-60 cents)
2 stopped at +100 cents each (+200 cents)

net result: 20% "win rate" and +$1,400 per contract on ten round turns

there's your statistical analysis from your own preferred trading symbol in today's current market environment :cool:

I am making assumptions here.

CL is more volatile than euro/usd. I found 20 pip stops were much better than 8 pip stops on euro usd.Based on higher volatility of CL, 50 C stops may produce better results.The wider the stops , the less likely one is taken out by increased volatility.

Have you any statistical information on using 50c stops?

My estimate of 50 c stops trading on highly trending days is

4 wins +100
4 losses -50
2 b/e 0

200 profit

Using 20c stops would require perfect timing of entry.
 
Quote from oilfxpro:

I am making assumptions here.

CL is more volatile than euro/usd. I found 20 pip stops were much better than 8 pip stops on euro usd.Based on higher volatility of CL, 50 C stops may produce better results.The wider the stops , the less likely one is taken out by increased volatility.

Have you any statistical information on using 50c stops?

My estimate of 50 c stops trading on highly trending days is

4 wins +100
4 losses -50
2 b/e 0

200 profit

Using 20c stops would require perfect timing of entry.

What happens on the 120-cent range, sideways chopping days? -50 cent rips are commonplace now. Near perfect entry timing OR repeated entry after being stop-chopped is the only way to keep draws manageable in between profit swings that erase all losses.

CL is a violent beast now... even -100 cent stops won't prevent losses. Small losses waiting for one solid win is the key to wild market action.
 
Back
Top