
Quote from NickelScalper:
In that case, explain how a method can add value without being able to anticipate whether price will move both in the right direction and to a certain minimum extent after the trader has committed to a prospective entry.
Quote from NickelScalper:
That's trend following, the topic of this thread.
You can't be serious.Quote from Cutten:
By having a positive expectation. If I have a biased coin that flips heads 51%, then I can make money even though I have no idea whether the next flip is going to be heads or tails.
Price can move massively in the wrong direction many times during the lifetime of your trading system (or even career), or even the *majority* of the time you trade, and yet you can still make net long run profits despite this fact.
To be profitable, a system only needs to antipate the distribution of possible future price movements more accurately than the market.
Quote from NickelScalper:
You can't be serious.
What you have done is merely substitute expectation for anticipation and agree with me.
A method must predict price to the extent necessary to form a basis for its expectations.Quote from Cutten:
Expectation is not the same as anticipation though, is it? A trend-follower doesn't have to be any good at predicting if a trend will continue. All they have to do is trade in a way such that the profits that accrue when the trend continues are higher than the losses they suffer during reversals and market chop. They don't have to predict price, merely the likely distribution of prices.
Quote from NickelScalper:
Which trend following strategy has the highest win ratio?