That is not a bad strategy at all. Especially in longer trends. I too scale in on a larger move as price moves my way and if I see enough pressures to keep the move going. Why? Because the market has inertia and I am betting it will continue far enough to be profitable for scaling in as it moves my way.
The problem is on slower moving days or tighter range days that strategy will have you losing over and over again as you buy one...moves 2 points in your favor...buy another...instead of continuing the move it immediately reverses 4 points and suddenly you are down 2 points on 1 and 4 points on the other. You had a chance to lock in 2 points on 1 but didn’t and now you are sitting on $300.00 dollar loss when it initially moved in your favor and you scaled up.
See, in works both ways in the world of scalping. Scaling up can be a double edged sword as well as averaging down. However, I agree if it is a powerful move there is no reason to not add to a position as it moves in your favor.
On slower grinding days or smaller range days averaging down and grabbing a point or two over and over as the market gives it to you then entering again as it drops below your previous profitable exit, then averaging down again taking profits again and doing this over and over has the same effect as compounding your profits. In effect you are grabbing monies as the market hands them to you then going right back in again playing now with your previous profit. Averaging down can work if you know when to do it and how to use and what to do when wrong. Probably 1/3 to 1/2 of my trades are of the averaging down type, another 1/3 of just straight scalping long or short with no averaging down, A very small amount are scaling in as it moves in my favor. The latter certainly is not my bread and butter.
It is one thing to theoretically write something out and another thing to embrace the strategy live. That doesn’t mean it won't work in select context but do that on every trade all day long and it will be a losing strategy. Too often a trader will find he scaled in as it moved in his favor and only to see an actual profit on his first entry dissipate into thin air just about the time he adds to his winning position. Then if a strong reversal takes place just as he entered on his second or third time He finds himself with a much bigger loss and is ready to kick himself for not grabbing his profit when he had a chance.
You gonna get maybe one or two good trends in a session to do what you are talking about above. Of course there are days in broad channels or ranges there will be more opportunities for doing so. But often you will just get a morning trend and an afternoon trend that might make what you are talking about feasible. So, if a trader is content to wait for those periods thats ok. But he is bypassing many many trading opportunities on the 81 five min bars of the ES. On most of those bars 1 and 2 point scalps can be made.
Myself I had rather make 3 or 4 two point scalps with size even if averaging down..make my money and go fishing. Instead of waiting all day for a strong enough BO to employ the strategy you laid out above. 5% to 10% of the session is gonna be strong enough intraday trends to BET the way you are describing above and to facilitate employing the strategy above, that you lay out. Given the fact that most BO attempts, of anything, fail employing that strategy, as a discretionary trader, all throughout the session will have a trader giving back actual (not hoped for profits) over and over.
See both (Averaging down), and (scaling in) on favorable moves have their pros and cons.
So, we have to ask ourselves what is most of a sessions price action made of? Trends and Successful BO’s which are conducive to your strategy or is it made up of PA that would be conducive to other strategies? Again, there is nothing wrong with doing what you say above as long as it is done in the right context. I do it but it is certainly one of my lessor used strategies.
One can’t Or rather shouldn’t just type a theoretical (even mathematical) concept up and expect that is the case across the board and that it is the strategy “par excellence”. Like anything else, used in the wrong context, it can be a horrible loser.
Many years ago when I was a young kid someone talked me into selling Amway. The chalkboard diagrams and the perfect presentations made it look simple to a young kid gunning to make some money. With great zeal I bought my kit and with excitement hit the road with $$ signs twirling around in my eyes. I quickly found out people didn’t give a damn if the LOC product could in fact clean, and I might add in seconds, black shoe polish smeared into a white hanky. Sure my live demonstration resulted in amazing looks and comments from them but as soon as they heard the price of LOC their amazement flew the coop faster than a chicken escaping a possum. I quickly found out them Amway demonstrations on the chalkboard or paper diagrams were not going to be so easy to pull off. Them dollar sign in my eyes were adjusted to cents.....
My Amway venture did not last too long. I found out the ones making those $ were the ones signing up folks to hit the streets and do the work of selling for them while they stockpiled and distributed the products to their many many little busy work ants feverishly trying to make them dollars twirling around in their eyes as the “for sure” presentations were the factor that induced them to the laborious process of trying to pull it off, in the real world of knocks and rejections.
And then you had all those big conventions highlighting the successful distributors rolling in the $$$ that would raise the expectation and hope of the beatendown..downtrodden..worker ants and it was almost like going to church...the atmosphere of those conventions. One could leave floating high on cloud 9 scrapping up enough energy for another 6 months of hitting the road doing you best while the distributors way up the line are on yatchs or cruises or expensive vacations. After a while one begins to wonder “what the hell is wrong with me.” Why can’t I make it. I seem to be as intelligent as them vacationing distributors. Why can’t I make it work? Is something wrong with me? Am I just a flop and failure in life? No! what has happened is you have been hoodwinked into a perfectly laid out strategy that doesn’t “fly” in the real world. And you have been using the wrong strategy for the context where the probabilities for success are very small.
Bottom line: if the methodologies I employ trading are gambling so are yours LOL. So we both take a chance and bet. You bet when the odds favor you. I bet when they favor my tactics and strategies which is most of the daily trading session.
So if you have the Tudor Jones paper posted to your trading monitor “only losers average down” you may wish to rip it off and replace it with “scaling in, as price moves in my favor is a losing strategy for most of the day’s session”
Happy Trading!
Volpri actually has a very good point in making his strategy sucessful: Often it is not that hard to identify the direction within a certain time frame, however the precise entry point is hard and tricky especially in volatile market, and if you set a narrow SL, you would often end up a loss before the price running in your direction. So Volpri's model would work after you identify a potential solid price channel, then you just enter the first trade in the channel's directions (L or S), and then the second, the third to get get an average advantage entry prices, then when price moves in your direction, you reduce and reduce and finally you reach a profitable outcome.
