Taking 410K to 4million by Year End 2010

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Quote from GG1972:

Another illustrious contribution -- do you really think the guy who made and put the $3 million into that account would be an idiot and if you read as much as you post the guy was talking about "relative" safe returns averaging 5%. He wasnt talking about trading.

Still waiting for you to say anything that has any basis in reality.
 
Wow. You both could not be more wrong. The reason for BIDU gapping up was still fully in force at the time of the trades. "Betting" against that with 300+ expiring option contracts because you felt BIDU "was overdone at 449" was reckless and totally avoidable, without any hindsight. Ever hear of giving a trade time to work? Talk about backing one's self into a corner with no room for error...

Quote from Mike805:

What is this; the "would'a could'a should'a" thread?

Come on now, the flaw in neke's process has nothing to do with trade selection.
Quote from No.Heat:

No disrespect No Doji but hindsight is 20/20, looks so obvious after the fact yet proves nothing since the past shows everything of pretty much every theory out there.
 
Quote from Trader666:

Wow. You both could not be more wrong. The reason for BIDU gapping up was still fully in force at the time of the trades. "Betting" against that with 300+ expiring option contracts because you felt BIDU "was overdone at 449" was reckless and totally avoidable, without any hindsight. Ever hear of giving a trade time to work? Talk about backing one's self into a corner with no room for error...

Let's try to distinguish between what was "right" and "wrong" here. If its a good expectancy trade, then who cares about the "wrongness" of it? One man's right is another man's wrong... Taking the trade in itself wasn't reckless, its the size and risk management that was reckless. That's the difference here.

I'm not going to argue about what type of trading works for a certain type of individual, but, there are general best practices when it comes to risk management that apply to everyone, no matter the style of trading. The size of this trade was emotional and reckless, hindsight or not.
 
Which is it?
Quote from Mike805:

One man's right is another man's wrong...

...there are general best practices when it comes to risk management that apply to everyone, no matter the style of trading.
Size and risk management are, in part, a function of what's being traded.
Quote from Mike805:
Taking the trade in itself wasn't reckless, its the size and risk management that was reckless.
Quote from Mike805:
the flaw in neke's process has nothing to do with trade selection
 
Quote from Trader666:

Which is it?

Size and risk management are, in part, a function of what's being traded.

Yeah, in part and that's what I'm trying to point out. Trading options on expiry isn't wrong and using discretion to determine "overbought" isn't necesarily wrong either.

Now, 300 contracts (wasn't it 12mil notional or something like that?) on a 400k account is wrong... the size is what is reckless here.
 
It's not that simple. One can't say that size on a 400K is ALWAYS reckless... the rationale behind the trade and what's being traded are also critical factors.

Quote from Mike805:

the size is what is reckless here.
 
Quote from Trader666:

It's not that simple. One can't say that size on a 400K is ALWAYS reckless... the rationale behind the trade and what's being traded are also critical factors.

Well, in my book it is that simple. 30-1 leverage on one position is definetly reckless, no matter the trade. That's just begging for pain or a blow-up.

FYI, I trade intraday only and my position size is never more than 3-5% of my account. Granted I'll have 100's of positions on occasion, some correlated and some not, but, my combined exposure to anyone instrument/market move is minimal (I also don't shoot for triple digit returns either). At 30-1, for one instrument, you're roadkill waiting to happen. Its insane no matter how you look at it...
 
How's his leverage 30-1? Besides his short position on stock, He brought long puts, and that's all he could lose. He leverage is 1-1 on these options.
 
Quote from jzeng:

How's his leverage 30-1? Besides his short position on stock, He brought long puts, and that's all he could lose. He leverage is 1-1 on these options.

Are you familiar with notional value?
 
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