INCORRECTAgain, you are reacting on a personal level and not evaluating properly. "Inferior" means you are being inferior to yourself.
INCORRECTAgain, you are reacting on a personal level and not evaluating properly. "Inferior" means you are being inferior to yourself.
Scaling in is superior behaviour?
I now think so.
In markets where stop losses are frequently hunted, scaling in allows a wider stop for that initial position. Nobody knows whether price will move in the desired direction from the outset. By scaling in we're letting the market feedback pull us into a larger position.
Can we differentiate between scaling in and averaging down?Every single trader that I’ve seen blow it - did it “scaling in”. On the floor, it was called ‘cannon balling’.
YMMV, I wish everyone good fortune!
Every single trader that I’ve seen blow it - did it “scaling in”. On the floor, it was called ‘cannon balling’.
YMMV, I wish everyone good fortune!
So you analyzed their trading edges over all of their trades and verified that their edges were solid and would have made them money had they not scaled in?
Seeing you posted "every single trader I've seen" means that I don't think you did this analysis.
I think these people scaled into non trending environments.
Can we differentiate between scaling in and averaging down?
Scaling in to me is adding to a position that has moved in my favor.
Averaging down is adding to a position that has moved against me.
I scale in. I rarely average down.
Personally, I scale into winning positions. I never add to losing positions.
“Cannonballing” is adding to a losing position in hopes of mean reversion.
Semantics. My mistake.