tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
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- 14 October 2004
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What's the difference between leaving capital earned from the market as opposed to other capital? Surely that's just a mind trick. The strategy of selective holdings for the long term surely can not be impacted by the source of the capital.
There is no difference:What's the difference between leaving capital earned from the market as opposed to other capital? Surely that's just a mind trick. The strategy of selective holdings for the long term surely can not be impacted by the source of the capital.
Does the same mindset of differing attitude to capital not also underlie the obsession with break-even stops? Willing to give more wriggle room/ benefit of the doubt in profit than in initial drawdown.There is no difference:
Your net wealth is the sum of cash in bank plus today's value of your portfolio (which includes shares, property, and everything else convertible into cash) minus total debt.
Pretending the current value of shares be any different to cash is a favourite mind game of those failing investors who gloss over their cellar dwellers with the excuse "A paper loss isn't a real loss until you sell."
(... and then they average down till the stock hits zero.)
After much thought and thinking about what sort of trading strategy I want to employ, I've decided that I am going to be a trend follower. You are right, I have already sized my risk based on my capital, why am I restricting the trade again with the trade's size against my capital. Doesn't make any sense.
A trend follower is one who will ride it as far as the trend takes them and that is what I want to do.
Going forward, I'm going to scrap the 7-13% rule for trade management. However, I am still going to keep the 7-13% rule for trades that are new. Keeping the 7-13% rule ensures that the trade's initial size isn't too big or small and adheres to my trading plan of holding between 8-12 stocks within my portfolio!
Does the same mindset of differing attitude to capital not also underlie the obsession with break-even stops? Willing to give more wriggle room/ benefit of the doubt in profit than in initial drawdown.
Loss aversion of “new” capital in a trade seems so much greater than the aversion to giving back a bit more of the “open profit” to stay in a trade.
This seems to be so even if the “new” capital has been derived from the market anyway. Seems realising a profit changes how capital is thought about.
These people have no idea how to value their holdings.Treating losses as "not real" like in your last paragraph would be a different mind game again wouldn't it?
These people have no idea how to value their holdings.
Ostriches.
If the story that we use to justify our trade/investment does not accord with reality then we need to exit immediately wherever that may be - breakeven has nothing to do with it. Your immediate momentum story may be valid - if it is then the stop should be wherever you first notice you don't have that initial momentum - full stop - If you want to increase your profitability forget about tying stops to breakeven its an arbitrary level to the market, only important to you driven by an illusion underpinned by the mindset we were discussing.Two things
(1) My testing on real time stop exits shows that well over 70% diminish to my stop if the stock hasn't risen by 1R IE it turns as soon as I buy it.
So no point in throwing money away.
(2) I'm constantly working on better R/R This helps enormously.
I'm happy with my aversion if you wish to call it that to loss. Ill minimise it where I can. Leaving it to hit my stop in over 70% of cases is not the smartest thing to do in my view.
When doing numbers on capital invested ---yes.
These people have no idea how to value their holdings.
Ostriches.
Maybe an even better option.if it is then the stop should be wherever you first notice you don't have that initial momentum - full stop
Thanks Craft.
(2) Other trades are generally taken that day or next day.
Think its minimal.
Current mood and today's performance has gotten me a little bit down and starting to doubt the system (I always doubt the system when I have a bad day), I need to be focused on my objective, think rationally and have a handle on my emotions.
I'm going to reiterate what Peter has said about no matter what, if a SP trades at or below your stop loss and this is part of your trading plan, you must sell. What if they bounce up and then tank? You can never predict what is going to happen. Emotion needs to be removed from trading decisions.ALL and CGF(intraday) also hit their stop losses. I missed selling them due to being busy at work and not paying as much attention as I normally would. I need to chin up and take action on them come Monday. What if they bounce back up? Monday's going to be hard...
1. Obviously that doesn't augur well. Today is only one down day. If you want to be a trend trader then you have to tolerate the ups and downs. The pull-backs (like today) set up higher lows that tell us the trend is intact. It could also be the start of a reversal. Nobody knows, but I hope you recognise the difference when it forms. One day against the prevailing trend is not a reversal unless you're a swing or momentum trader.
One huge down day with bad FA news might be one of your exits.
2. If one down day triggers some sells then I'd say your stops are too tight for a trend trader, unless you tightened them based on your trade management rules. eg protecting above average profits, change in market trend, unsatisfactory FA news etc...
3. Once your exit triggers, sell asap without exception. Even if the DOW rises 300pts overnight. If you wait to see what happens after 10am Monday, you're setting a bad example (and making a trading mistake - which you'll record). You can always re-buy it if price action makes a new high showing the trend is still going.
I could go on, but I wanted to let you know we're watching and hoping you do a good job. If you make any profit in the next six months that'll be a bonus.
I hope this thread helps you to stick to your plans. You've got to be excited about 40+ years of compounding profits. Wow.
Good to see you finally got this thread up and running Ryan! Just had a read through the thread and any questions I was going to raise have already been addressed.
I'm going to reiterate what Peter has said about no matter what, if a SP trades at or below your stop loss and this is part of your trading plan, you must sell. What if they bounce up and then tank? You can never predict what is going to happen. Emotion needs to be removed from trading decisions.
Apart from that, good luck and I'm interested to see what the future holds for this portfolio.
*subscribed*
Ryan, is there any reason why your stop losses are not in the market?
I think you have the wrong chart up????? this is costa group not A2...????Peter2 made me think about my stop losses so I went to review my past trades that failed and I found something very common in many of them... I did not give the stock enough time to perform and I was strangling the stocks with tight stop losses. As my strategy is a trend following, I need to allow for the stocks to pull back to it's higher low before continuing. I hardly allowed a stock to do that... ASDGADFHFDG so angry with myself right now!!
Here is an example of a trade that I missed - A2M:View attachment 71091
I bought into A2M in the green arrow,with a stop loss at $2.80. I got impatient through the week and I was finding any excuse to reduce my portfolio's open losses so I raised the SL to $3.00 which was hit on the day before the SP resumed its trend.
Impatient, being frugal with my losses and strangling the stock has made me miss out on the run up... There's more than one example btw in my past.
I also reviewed my portfolio this weekend and noticed that while ALL and CGF has hit it's stop loss, it is still behaving in a normal trend behaviour.
I am going to review the current stop losses on my portfolio tonight and may need to re-adjust some stop losses.
Very annoyed with myself now but at the time same, glad I picked this up early.
I bought into A2M in the green arrow,with a stop loss at $2.80. I got impatient through the week and I was finding any excuse to reduce my portfolio's open losses so I raised the SL to $3.00 which was hit on the day before the SP resumed its trend
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