Quote from Johno:
Low risk entries and picking tops or bottoms are usually totally different animals!
Time to start thinking!
Quote from nysestocks:
It is very obvious that you do not know, or understand, what it is I am talking about.
If a hedge fund had access to the information that I have gained access to, they would make Warren Buffet look like a tidily winks player!
But, they would need to be very clever and not arouse too much interest in their dealings - which would be very hard when one is talking about trading $billions!
So, for the purpose of the ordinary man in the street, which is the one I am interested in helping, I will continue to post as I see fit.
Those who will take the time to work out what it is I post about, will not regret it one little bit.
As for the big hedge funds, they are the ones that I, and my like, take money from each and every day. It is like taking candy off a baby![]()
Quote from nysestocks:
Expectancy is sometimes recommended as a predictor of profitability. It is the probable return or profit for the next trade. It applies to a single trade.
Quote from intradaybill:
Not correct. Expectancy is the edge of a trading system - in the traditional gambling sense - assuming a large enough sample of trades has been used to calculate it and profits and losses are normally distributed.
Expectancy is NOT "the probable return or profit for the next trade". It is the expected return calculated from a sample of trades. You should learn the difference.
There is no such thing as "probable return". It is only in the mind of the person who wrote that piece.
In probability theory, there are event spaces and probability of events. In statistics, there is expected value and deviations from it, amongst other things.
Whoever mixes probabilities and statistics is in the best case scenario, a loser.
Quote from DrEvil:
Nysestocks,
thanks for the thread. I am enojying it! I will be honest and admit that I have no idea what the obvious is that you refer to. That said, I am making money. So I ask myself, perhaps I am doing the 'obvious' unwittingly and if I am then my percentage returns should roughly equal those one a trader who knows what the 'obvious' is and exploits is correctly.
So my question is, what would be an aproximate percentage of growth on the account of such a trader who is knowlingly exploiting the 'obvious'?
Quote from DrEvil:
Nysestocks,
thanks for the thread. I am enojying it! I will be honest and admit that I have no idea what the obvious is that you refer to. That said, I am making money.