too much emphasis on defense in trading

Quote from snake69:

Iloveoptions,

Would you care to elaborate more on your system and techniques. You're performance has been quite good although it's interesting that the wins are so much smaller than the losses--good thing they're less than 20% of your trades.

I've also noticed it looks like you're willing to take positions with a substantial amount of your capital, perhaps up to 20%, in each trade.

Can you also talk about how you determine that position size. For instance, in one trade you bought 300 options at 90 cents each, a month later you had a trade of only 100 options at 90 cents (1/3 the position size).

Also, what did you do differently between 2004 and 2005?

I guess the other thing is, are the results actual or theoretical...it looks like collective2 doesn't audit actual results, but simulates your system.

Anything else you could add would be very interesting to read.

Thanks.
--Snake

OK, you asked several good questions and in return, you deserve some honest answers. Really, the answer to your first question is described as clearly as possible on collective2’s website without revealing the model. In a nutshell, I look for stocks that “misbehave” from their long-term “predictable” profile. I find about 2 to 3 stocks every week that consist of a certain unique profile. I then input them in my volatility model, the main building block of my system, in order to see a specific behavior that is missed totally by the naked eye when looking at a stock chart or with your traditional indicators. If it passes certain stringent requirements I have set, I will bring their options to further investigate their “true cost” relative to my future prediction of the favored outcome taking into account the percentage of error my model has experienced for that particular stock over a period of 5 years.

Indeed, you can see clearly from the graph that the inception period was very tough indeed, however as time went on, the performance started to firm up bit by bit, and I started stringing multiple winners. It meant that there's a solid and well thought out methodology driving the system. But my trading methodology in 2004 was still missing 2 very critical ingredients that I was still attempting to solve and eventually add to the system, hence the drawdown.

Now, move forward to 2005 till now and you'll start to notice that the dips in the equity graph were getting smaller and smaller. I mean the system’s accuracy is >80%, strong enough that it just gobbled up any losses that came my way. The good news is that the drawdowns are becoming smaller and smaller on a percentage basis and the speed of making new highs in the equity graph is also moving in the right direction.

The size of the trade is dependent on the confidence factor the system generates for that profile misbehavior.
 
Hi Surf,

Very interesting post, Thanks.

Some time ago I had the opportunity to witness a trader, in person, with a different approach to the markets. Instead of the traditional "static" trade where one had an entry, stop, and profit targets only. His method had all that, plus a management method that made it somehow entirely different.


At first glance, his management method appeared to be a Martingale scheme, just ripe for ruin. But watching him work his positions, adjusting his cost basis, talking scalps, watching price action, and flipping his direction when needed, I realized this was a far more aggressive method than mine, yet at the same time it was quite defensive. The method was not complicated, but definitely not something you read in "Daytrade your way to a fortune". Actually, many trading activities he did, seemed to contradict "the correct" things I've learnt and read about the markets. And his success is far greater than mine.

Since that experience, I have come across a few traders, here on ET that do similar things. Not precisely the same, but similar in that their approach to the market is both "aggressive and non-conventional". I definitely think dying a death of a thousand cuts, isn't all it's cracked up to be. And defensive trading is only the half of it.


In the end, true success is bestowed with the "aggressors".


Good Trading,
Dave
 
Quote from TruthTeller:

Obvious from your post you haven't been trading long. Otherwise you would clearly understand - and appreciate - the need for always maintaining a defensive posture. But as with thousands of other busted traders, you'll learn this lesson too late.

You've likely heard it said that there are bold traders and old traders, but very few old bold traders. Only experience will demonstrate to you why that's so true.

Well you lived up to your screen name.....

What you say is gospel truth. I find this a totally inane thread. Virtually all trading literature focuses on everything BUT risk management. If one published a book about how methodical one must be in taking small losses, testing the water for direction, getting chopped up, and how one must wait patiently for low risk entries, well you'd bore a lot of readers.
 
I'd agree that no amount of defense will save you if you have no offense.

I think the emphasis in trading literature and public forums like these on defense is simply due to the fact that a good offense is kept hidden and not discussed as long as it continues to work. But the defensive theories we're offered are necessarily generic by nature (ie, only risk X% per trade, per day etc).

Another way to look at it is that there really is no difference between offense and defense. Capital is allocated in a manner tailored to the specific edge applied, and is removed when the edge no longer holds or has been played out. The technique simply boils down to pushing your strengths and downplaying your weaknesses. One really shouldn't need to "think" about defense at all; ideally, it should be indistinguishable from one's offense by the fact that either the opportunity is there/potential profit still remains -- or not.
 
Pabst - you may have some insight into this.

I once had a similar discussion here with traders about scaling out. Which I supported.

I remember some guys familiar with the floor stating you had to go for it and go big.

They spoke of Richard Dennis in his hey day piling in his trades on the floor and just making tons cause he was big and aggressive.

I mentioned that back when I was making money trading. I took some of my profits and put them in the managed futures funds. One of the being the Dennis fund. I saw that his returns were all over the place. I started off with a very quick 30% drawdown and then 6 months later I was up about 100% from my initial capital. So I took half off the table and used the money to buy a house in Carlsbad. A few months after that scale out, The Dennis fund had a huge draw down and closed. In in all I got out at a profit but had I not scaled out I would have been net loser.

This is still an incomplete story. As a trader I was all about defense. To the point of not making nearly as much as guys in my office whom I had trained. Later when I was no longer able to make much trading. I got into real estate.

I sold my house in Carlsbad. (9 mos early) Took large profits and bought real estate here in florida. Which has turned out to be the poster area for the anti-bubble fed propaganda. The wall steet journal said we were the hottest area in the country last year with a 41% gain. I have been leveraged to the hilt and I have been a much bigger pig than I ever should have been. If I can get out soon. I will have plenty of cash to start trading again. But I could be slaughtered.

We will see in the next few months.
 
You've always been one of my very favorite people here. You went to Fla with a mission and got the job done. Now THAT was a proper time to be aggressive. :)
Quote from jem:

Pabst - you may have some insight into this.

I once had a similar discussion here with traders about scaling out. Which I supported.

I remember some guys familiar with the floor stating you had to go for it and go big.

They spoke of Richard Dennis in his hey day piling in his trades on the floor and just making tons cause he was big and aggressive.

I mentioned that back when I was making money trading. I took some of my profits and put them in the managed futures funds. One of the being the Dennis fund. I saw that his returns were all over the place. I started off with a very quick 30% drawdown and then 6 months later I was up about 100% from my initial capital. So I took half off the table and used the money to buy a house in Carlsbad. A few months after that scale out, The Dennis fund had a huge draw down and closed. In in all I got out at a profit but had I not scaled out I would have been net loser.

This is still an incomplete story. As a trader I was all about defense. To the point of not making nearly as much as guys in my office whom I had trained. Later when I was no longer able to make much trading. I got into real estate.

I sold my house in Carlsbad. (9 mos early) Took large profits and bought real estate here in florida. Which has turned out to be the poster area for the anti-bubble fed propaganda. The wall steet journal said we were the hottest area in the country last year with a 41% gain. I have been leveraged to the hilt and I have been a much bigger pig than I ever should have been. If I can get out soon. I will have plenty of cash to start trading again. But I could be slaughtered.

We will see in the next few months.
 
Nice post. This isn't football. Nor is it pitching and hitting. It's just flow where the transition game between offense and D is indistinguishable. And yes, it's much easier discussing what doesn't work than revealing what does.

Quote from illiquid:

I'd agree that no amount of defense will save you if you have no offense.

I think the emphasis in trading literature and public forums like these on defense is simply due to the fact that a good offense is kept hidden and not discussed as long as it continues to work. But the defensive theories we're offered are necessarily generic by nature (ie, only risk X% per trade, per day etc).

Another way to look at it is that there really is no difference between offense and defense. Capital is allocated in a manner tailored to the specific edge applied, and is removed when the edge no longer holds or has been played out. The technique simply boils down to pushing your strengths and downplaying your weaknesses. One really shouldn't need to "think" about defense at all; ideally, it should be indistinguishable from one's offense by the fact that either the opportunity is there/potential profit still remains -- or not.
 
Quote from marketsurfer:
hi,

it is my contention that there is entirely too much emphasis place on defense instead of offense in the field of trading.

having a good offense is the key to making money in the market, defense will simply keep you liquid longer. most of what i have read ( extensive ) in the field stresses defensive tactics or how not to lose, instead of workable, aggressive offensive trading maneuvers. aggressive is the key, and the ONLY way not to slowly grind away by placing too much emphasis on defense.

any thoughts?
surfer
This is a refreshing point of view, even if it'll eventually be bombarded into submission with counter-arguments ... :)
 
Quote from jonnysharp:

in any game the best defense is a good offense.
to the brave go the fortunes.
Fortune or Death! :eek:

Fortune or death ...? :(

Maybe ... not. :confused:
 
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