First, I would like to say that I have no clue at all what R. Seykota uses. I would think that he developed his own indicator or series of indicators long ago. Looking at the state of the art at least one of them has to use volatility, maybe with a little volume, open interest and consensus report thrown in.Billpritjr >2. Likely uses Moving Averages to determine trend<
To get those kinds of results he has to be a ling term trader. Long-term traders do not trade tops and bottoms. They pull the big middle, the Taoist equilibrium out of a trend.freealways >has an uncanny ability to anticipate tops and bottoms. <
Wally knows what is going on, âweeks to months,â or longer. Much longer.Wally_>His timeframes are weeks to months. He does not have to catch bottoms or tops, <
Sure backwards just try MACDFishSauce>Identifying the trend is the hard part .. Looking backward, it is easy. <
Welcome Hungry4, risk management is not a good term for it. Tharp calls it âPosition sizing!â Position sizing has a lot more to it than just how many contracts to buy, hold or sell. It also includes when to periodically adjust the number of contracts to keep your risk constant.Hungry4Knowledg>Are you talking about the number of contracts only, or are there other things? <
Not a chance!Trend Fader>the guy probably used something like a simple moving average crossover.. <
You will have to ask Ed. But the stock market is more subject to manipulation by insiders. Commodities really have their base in the cash markets, which are wide, vast pools of international capital. By there very size, they are less subject to artificial influence.SilverDelta >futures markets over stocks?<