I dont want breakouts I want potential breakouts.
Among other things which are NOT breakout related.
I havent any of this sort up yet but will explain when they are.
I have criteria I scan.
Being an alert of various breakouts 5 days ago.
Along with a liquidity filter.
I have 4 codes which give me many prospects.
With position sizing 2% Risk on most and FLT being stated as a trade and that stock at mid $44.00 my thoughts it would consume over $100K of funds by itself as a risk of .80 cents approx. per share we would end up with about 2,500 shares.
I know we are using 2:1 margin with IB but would we have had enough funds for the 5 trades altogether?
Pav,
77% of starting capital invested in one stock is an absurd position size, even if it is only 39% of available capital. Even though there is a theoretical risk of 2% (is this 2% of capital or available capital?), all positions are at the mercy of the sudden trading halt and an announcement that the financial controller has run off to the carribean with all the funds.
The other aspect is that if bull market conditions return, then lots of potential trades will become available. If all capital is tied up in 2-3 stocks only then there will be many lost opportunities. Murphy's law dictates that the few you are in will not perform as well as those that you don't have the funds available for.
Personally, I would not be using any more than 10% of available capital in any one position, and more likely 5%. Be interesting what position size Tech suggests for this exercise.
Does the exercise allow for additions to existing positions with positive price movement? If so then 39% of AC is way out of line.
I agree.
Not even considering the opportunity cost, this is dangerous.
We would really be only able to hold 3-5 positions max at this rate.
Not sure what Tech's thoughts are?
Mine are reduce initial risk to 1% of capital.
To now the portfolio is running at +50% on initial capital since inception in January.
87 emails and around 125 charts.Of course a heap of other interesting stats on Drawdown win Loss etc.
I am just surprised that you seem to be nutting out some fairly important / fundamental issues that most traders come to face pretty early on.
Im not suprised you are making judgements before I have an opportunity to comment!
LOL. I think he learnt that art off you.....
Would be able to elaborate further on specifically what you are scanning for? Or preferably, post the code you are using for your scans, if you are willing to share this info.
Plus one for the watch list from PAV
Im not suprised you are making judgements before I have an opportunity to comment!
Firstly Keep the questions coming and SKC I apologise for being curt.
Without clarification and questions nothing is solved.
Risk is 2% on initial account. Thats $ 50K NOT $100K
So $1000.Max risk---and the most common we will use as our initial risk and position sizing model.
As for amount in a single trade.
For short term trading I have had 50% on one position.
These trades here will only run a few days to a week max---unless we get a bull run where they will then run weeks.
77% of starting capital invested in one stock is an absurd position size, even if it is only 39% of available capital. Even though there is a theoretical risk of 2% (is this 2% of capital or available capital?), all positions are at the mercy of the sudden trading halt and an announcement that the financial controller has run off to the carribean with all the funds.
Great thread guys, have only just discovered it.
I have also been recording the initial stop when I enter any given trade, my current stop and the price I am stopped out at (obviously). However I haven't put too much thought into how interpret this info however.
My query is what insight does this provide? Knowing that my stop has moved up x% tells me what?
I can assume a few basic insights, i.e. looking at what trades are profitable vs not, and seeing how much my stop has moved may indicate whether or not I am moving my stop up too quick or not.
Any thoughts on the above line of thinking?
just to say that I am following this thread with interest and it answers a lot of my questions and will influence the way I trade
One question: I also use stop (automated )
if Share XYZ equal or below let 's say 2$ sell at $2 (I am with bell direct)
Sometimes these fail (too quick a drop and I am left at the end of the day with big loosers),
I have also noticed that very often, my stop triggers, get executed but I could easily have set a sligthly higher exit price (still ok with the idea of exiting but may need to increase the sell at value?)
How do you reconcile these two aspects???
ensure stop are activated and when decision is made to exit automatically, actually ensuring you do not get too bad a deal
These are only affecting a few percents that is what make me loose some money last yearAnd lastly, does the type of share affect your exit decision or do you just look at trends
example:
Thursday bought BBG, went 33% yesterday and having no faith in this company I existed; nice profit but could it be the case of not maximising my profit..
This was a pure emotive act so not a good thing but once I clicked during the lunch break too late to go back
Would you have raise your stop by 30%???
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