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risk:reward is of little use to me. My risk on any position is around 20%. But in reality my avg loss is around 5%. The initial risk on any trade is still 20%.
I .
WTF?
risk:reward is of little use to me. My risk on any position is around 20%. But in reality my avg loss is around 5%. The initial risk on any trade is still 20%.
I .
Why not move the stop above break even and get some negative R:R action happening?
Surely the R:R of a trade must use the initial risk, not the decided risk when the trade is closed out?
The Risk on a trade for me is the maximum amount I'm prepared to lose when i take the trade. The reward is the result of the trade. But I do not trade base on R:R, and like Mr J believe that the horse comes before the cart, and changes to the way we trade effect results, in turn effecting R:R. The R:R only changes because you're making a fundamental change to the trade or the way you trade (eg tightening stop).
risk:reward is of little use to me. My risk on any position is around 20%. But in reality my avg loss is around 5%. The initial risk on any trade is still 20%.
I find a profit:loss ratio that incorperates the win rate to be more useful. Risk constantly changes throughout a trade, but the end results are fixed and provide a much more stable benchmark.
Surely the R:R of a trade must use the initial risk, not the decided risk when the trade is closed out?
My risk on any position is around 20%. But in reality my avg loss is around 5%. The initial risk on any trade is still 20%
............
http://www.fullermoney.com/content/...onsFromInconsistentForecastingSkillsNov07.pdf
Nice overview of many various aspects of Stops.
SURELY IS an IMPORTANT TOPIC
esp since MARKETS
are not random
But hard to PREDICT
They TREND but EVOLVE...
Motorway
Talking about stops, one analysis that seems to be underused (maybe not, but I haven't seen anyone talk about it) is finding the optimal stop size. A lot of people may use the previous swing high/low, a moving average, previous support or resistance etc, but I think there's a better way to go about it by analysing how much of our stop our previous trades have used.
If we find our profitable trades rarely go 30 ticks against us initially, why would we use a 50 tick stop? If we dropped it to 30 we'd boost our return by 66% (minus the odd profitable trade that did go past -30). Big boost to be had there.
When we finally solves all chess puzzles then the next step is analysis a totally random market and make it rational! No more emotional buys/sells, we are here to make a profit and we have workout strategies that will work forever.
Just my opinion, DYOR![]()
Anyway, I believe all strategies that make a profit will make a profit and the odd to make a profit is a lot higher than 50% (if not 100%) for a good trade!
Hisitory wise, a good company always make a profit and I guess the odd for investing in such company is 100% profitable in the long run.
Motorway, sorry but I have no idea what you just said, and it doesn't seem to be anything about analysing the size of the initial stop?
But I think there's a better way to go about it by analysing how much of our stop our previous trades have used.
( mentioned back in the thread )
What analysis I use for trading
brty said:In Tech/a's example of a 3R trade , risking 10c to make 30c, the risk reward ratio changes during the trade, even when the stop is brought to 'break-even'.
When the trade is 20c in your favor, with the stop at 'break-even', you are still effectively risking 20c to make 10c. Unless of course 'won money' is different to 'lost money'.
But at breakeven there is no profit realised, nor unrealised.Yes, which is why I disagree when people talk of "free trades" when moving the stop to break even. It's not free, because the unrealised profits are still at risk.
But at breakeven there is no profit realised, nor unrealised.
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