Quote from marketsurfer:
No firepit photo attached. Please post here.
Via http://www.mercenarytrader.com/2012/09/kicking-back-at-lake-tahoe/
Quote from marketsurfer:
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Quote from darkhorse:
Trading Wisdom 26: The Symbol of the Trader
"The symbol of all relationships among such men, the moral symbol of respect for human beings, is the trader. We, who live by values, not by loot are traders, both in manner and spirit. A trader is a man who earns what he gets and does not give or take the undeserved. A trader does not ask to be paid for his failures, nor does he ask to be loved for his flaws. A trader does not squander his body as fodder, or his soul as alms. Just as he does not give his work except in trade for material values, so he does not give the values of his spirit - his love, his friendship, his esteem - except in payment and in trade for human virtue, in payment for his own selfish pleasure, which he receives from men he can respect. The mystic parasites who have, throughout the ages, reviled the trader and held him in contempt, while honoring the beggars and the looters, have known the secret motive of the sneers: a trader is the entity they dread - a man of justice."
- John Galt, Atlas Shrugged
JS comment:
Ayn Rand is a controversial figure. Do you agree with her idealistic portrayal of the trader? What do you think of Objectivism in general - excellent philosophy or narcissistic bullshit?
Some traders are obviously immoral, corrupt, incompetent, etcetera. But does this matter relative to the ideal of what trading in the pure abstract can represent?
Are you proud to call yourself a trader? Do you have a trader's code that you follow, or any type of moral code for that matter, by which you set certain rules, habits and attitude guidelines for yourself based on aesthetic and intrinsic merit?
If so, where did your code come from? Did you purposely adopt it, or inherit it by accident or default? Have you ever considered modifying, enhancing, or clarifying it?
If no code to speak of, have you considered the potential life benefits of creating or embracing one - to better shape and define a sense of purpose and who you are?
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Quote from darkhorse:
a trader with a cushion of profit in his account has "earned the right to swing" at a conviction based trade because his mortality risk has been reduced.
[...]
In similar fashion, one can take conviction-based trades in bigger size with an accumulated cushion of profit because the profit cushion itself reduces mortality risk.
[...]
Then, too, there are positive outlier considerations - especially given that winning and losing streaks for a trading methodology are typically not entirely random, and may not actually be random at all. If you are on an exceptional hot streak in markets lately, it may be that conditions are aiding your methodology and that those conditions will persist. If you are on a rough losing streak in markets lately, it may be that conditions are creating headwinds and those headwinds will persist. This is even more reason to be pro-cyclical in one's sizing efforts. By reducing risk when your cushion of profits is not there, you reduce the odds of being taken out and reduce your total market exposure in general terms in periods when results are poor. On the flip side, intelligently increasing risk while all is going well increases the odds of potentially exploiting what poker players refer to as a "heater" or a "sick run," while generally maximizing exposure when conditions are favorable.
In sum, because of mortality risk and pro-cyclical factors relating to market conditions, a smart discretionary trader will size positions differently well above the zero line than he will at the ZRL or below it, and it is absolutely rational and logical to do so.
I've read Rand's Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead several years ago. Pseudo-intellectual crap. She obviously had a hysterical knee-jerk reaction to the oppressive regime from which she hailed, and figured that if one extreme is destructive, then the other extreme must be the way to go. I think the attraction of her "philosophy" is two-fold. First it appeals to a lot of people's darker sides and validates their baser tendencies. Second, unlike other philospohies, it is much more accessible because it is so one-dimensional. Therefore, falling prey to false equivalency of philosophical thought, it is the lazy man's shortcut to becoming a "deep thinker."
Quote from darkhorse:
p.s. Strangely enough, the above as described would still have value even if one had an "infinite bankroll" i.e. mortality risk of zero (even though such is never a reality).
If two traders with infinite bankrolls were competing in markets, and one used dynamic position sizing while the other did not, the trader who used dynamic sizing would have more favorable exposure levels over time - he would spend more time trading large while trading well, correspondingly trading smaller while trading poorly (regardless of where the poor trading came from) - as such beating the trader who always used fixed sizing and was neither consistently bigger when hot nor consistently smaller when cold. The perceived advantage of making back drawdowns faster (via not trading smaller when cold) would be crushed by the positive competitive outlier of trading much larger in significant rush periods. It is worth it to trade small most of the time, so you can trade big (perhaps very big) into the right trends.