@tradingismybusiness
you make some good arguments. You may be right on your methodology. I will have to test that out trading live. If it pans out I may forever give up scaling in or averaging down. Now that will make ON (aka Fedex) chuckle!
Some theories just don’t pan out in the real world when actually employing them. While they sound good they just can’t be pulled off for one reason or the other. Averaging down has worked for me once I figured out a way to get back any losses via doubling or tripling up once the market PA has proved my premise wrong. But I am certainly willing to attempt anything that is legal LOL So, thanks for sharing your thoughts.
I will have to try it out over a period of time against another account. Since I have more than one futures account I could, in one, take trades and use my usual methods and take the same setups in the other account but cut losses and double up on re-entries as opposed to averaging down. Or I could use the same account and do your version in MES and mine in ES and at the end of the day count points made to see which worked better. Since MES and ES track together.
Over a few days if your way consistently is proving out more profitable then I would be foolish to not use it. As a scalper win rate has always been a key metric for myself. But in the end I will readily agree that what is most important is $$$. Btw I am quite sure in my journal I have a chart or two showing my averaged down exits with a loss and how I got them back very quickly by doubling or tripling up. If not, then I guess I just forgot to post them. They ought to be somewhere cause I take snapshots of daily trades. However, I do admit If I average down right the odds are very favorable that I end the day profitable and with a high win rate. While I may lose on an entry or two within an averaged down trade, overall the trade is profitable. This was something Fedex could never understand so he labeled it magic. BUT if there is a more magical way of doing it I am game if for no other reason than to cause my friend Fedex to pull his hair out with all this magic going on left and right. ROFLMAO
As I see it basically you are using what I use to get my losses back in an averaged down position. I exit loss then reverse direction and double or triple up. You exit loss and re-enter in the SAME direction doubling or tripling up.
Now to test this out live I need some details in the mechanics of it. Lets say I start with 1 contract. At what point do I exit it with a loss? One point loss? Three point loss? At what point do I then re-enter doubling down in size with 2 contracts? And so...on....could you give me some ideas about this?
Or do I just follow my method? That is when I enter 1 contract I enter 1 in your method. When I first add to my losing position I exit your losing position of 1 contract. So I am flat in your account) and now have 2 contracts in mine. So, when do I re-enter on yours with 2 contract? On my next round of averaging down i.e. my second time I averaging down after my initial entry? If so, after doing so, then in yours I have 2 contracts. In mine 3 contracts. Since you apparently have thought through these things give me some guidance so the test will be a valid comparison. Don’t forget to include when to stop buying in your account and when to stop averaging down in my account i.e. when to just hold until whatever happens. Also the SL quagmire. And when to exit with a total loss in both accounts. I know when to do so in my account and I know how to get back the loss. How do I handle getting back the loss in your account when nothing is working in your account? Just like my strategy double and reverse?
Please describe the mechanics of how to pull it off trading both accounts or Instruments side by side. There to be some ground rules for a Valid test or comparison of the two methods no?