Quote from austinp:
While I watch the charts wedge into typical index-option expiry death coils, let me add a couple of thoughts:
#1: In writing countless mechanical systems, every example with no exceptions showed diminished overall profit AND smaller profit per trade size using a scaled-out approach.
Why? Very simple. Some trades over a large sample size will go z-number of points in favor of typical entry signals. w-number of trades will immediately go against the entry, and y-number of trades will slop around in sideways fashion.
When building a system - method - approach, we must have some idea where to harvest profits from. That is critical for several reasons... in picking initial stop-loss / risk parameters, and managing winners.
In order to maximize overall returns AND per trade profit size, those z-trades need be captured in highest efficiency possible. There is no good way to manage the y and w type trades... they never offer much if any real profit potential.
The z-type trades are where an account balance grows. That is the edge, that is the bankroll. Any tactics used to exit z-trades early will directly diminish said bankroll.
In order to know our trade approach is sound, we must first prove that some number of trades will go far enough in favor to offset all else. If we know for a fact that exists in our approach, we must therefore treat <b>each and every trade</b> as if it will be a z-type result for maximum overall profit and per-trade potential.
*
Here's the human pitfall which overrides system trading: emotion places <u>more emphasis on each and every single trade</u> than emphasis on overall cumulative data from large sample size.
Said another way, we trust that some trades will progress far enough past entry to make us overall profitable, but we fixate on the results of the current trade more than overall blend of results.
You see where I'm going. Traders do go broke taking profits... that happens all the time. It happens because they take too small profits from z-type trades which is the essence of their edge. Little can be done to manage the rest, so small profits are erased = negated by small losses.
**
Whether scaling out is wrong for everyone or not is debatable. What is a mathematical fact on the topic? Write any mechanical system and add scaled out partial profit rules instead of all-out rules at optimum AVERAGE profit size. See what the results are in overall profit and per-trade profit size for each scenario. I know the answer already... but you'll believe your own math a whole lot more than you'll believe mine :>)
Hope this helps and/or entertains