It all depends on the size of the capital. Why dozen accounts? I have 3 brokers with access to hundreds of markets in all asset classes.
Well, show me a close to 100% win system with a volatility of 1% and I'll show you a poorly optimized jewel. Or you take too few trades, or the trades you take are not big enough. You can easily double your gains with it. By pimping the volatility, of course.No one is saying you need to risk only 1%. What Neuroway is trying to say is that it is possible to have a close to 100% system win rate so that the 1% risk control become meaningless.
Respectfully, I don't agree with this part, at all (I agreed with your original comment that "1%", in abstract, didn't really mean anything).
It's possible as a retail trader to have one account, never have more than one trade open at a time, never expose more than a maximum of 1% of the account-funds to risk at a time, and make some very "interesting gains", if you trade often enough (and obviously if you have a genuine edge in the first place.)
Bottomline gang: risk and reward are correlated.
How many books have been written about that ?
My point is that a trading system can become like a F-1 car instead of a gaz guzzling low perf comfy SUV
You won't become Michael Schumacher or Fernando Alonso by cruising on the F1 tracks at 65 MPH
You gonna have, at some point in the race, to bear more risk
Respectfully, I don't agree with this part, at all (I agreed with your original comment that "1%", in abstract, didn't really mean anything).
It's possible as a retail trader to have one account, never have more than one trade open at a time, never expose more than a maximum of 1% of the account-funds to risk at a time, and make some very "interesting gains", if you trade often enough (and obviously if you have a genuine edge in the first place.)
Here is a direct quote from one of the market wizards that has had one of the best ROR's on the planet spanning the last 3 decades.
"Just so you know, most people who trade for a living risk less than 1% of their capital in a trade, 2% in a maximum commitment." Peter Brandt