that is pyramiding and works great in bubbles, where theres lots of momentum.
just like a few posters said its devastating in chop
just like a few posters said its devastating in chop
... it actually goes the opposite way: shorter time frames trend moreQuote from Xman:
In my experience, and this is a limited one, trends have a better chance of holding in larger time frames. Intraday, trends are not the norm, therefore it would make sense to add to winners on trends based on charts spawning multiple days perhaps weeks of data, rather than risking immediate reversal in an intraday trend that can hardly be trusted.
X

Quote from peilthetraveler:
So if Martin Gale strategy will eventually blow your account, wouldnt doing the opposite give you insane gains?
I hear people say Martin Gale strategy (where you keep averaging down until the stock goes up) will eventually always blow you up. So i wonder if there is anyone that has ever tried the reverse. When a stock goes up, add more and more. Seems like a good way to lose money consistantly, but have one absolutely huge score every now and then.
Seems a little crazy to me though, but maybe some of you have tried it before.
... martingale and reverse-martingale seem to be favored by "guessers": jump in, then see what happens ... not a good strategyQuote from peilthetraveler:
So if Martin Gale strategy will eventually blow your account, wouldn't doing the opposite give you insane gains?
I hear people say Martin Gale strategy (where you keep averaging down until the stock goes up) will eventually always blow you up. So i wonder if there is anyone that has ever tried the reverse. When a stock goes up, add more and more. Seems like a good way to lose money consistently, but have one absolutely huge score every now and then.
Seems a little crazy to me though, but maybe some of you have tried it before.
When you know what you're doing compounding's enough (!)Quote from FeenixRizin:
buy at strong support, sell at strong resistence
if it confirms strong support add when it breaks the next resistence, if it fails strong support, get out
if it confirms strong resistence add when it breaks the next support, if it fails strong resistence, get out ...
i think it really is that simple ...
EDIT: Don't lose after you've added