Originally posted by skiracer
1. In your example, +10k profit outcome is 4k more profit than your +6k outcome. And from a percentage basis, it's 65% BETTER than 6k!

2. I don't think you can measure the worthiness of this by just looking at % profit from entry nor the ROI. It's deeper than that and embodies the psychological aspects.
You are leveraging the fact that you are RIGHT about the trend. You are demanding that the position PROVE it's worth you investing in it. You want to see measurable success before you put your money down.
And by the way, I think it's a whole lot more clever than using a buy stop to buy when it first reaches in your case $12 a share. That would be too aggressive for me. The adds have to be clever and you may well wait for a move to 13 then a fall 12 where you buy into weakness, according to your system rules (in my case a channel long or perhaps even a later turn up in the right circumstances). On top of that, the add HAS to be very tightly limited to avoid eroding your profit of the 1st position. In other words, stalk a perfect add, with maybe 1 or 2% risk on the entry.
Without question, in a choppy market this method will frustrate and stop you out more often than you'll be successful. But it's never ONLY about % win rate. I've already covered this ground in this thread, highlighting how one can have a very low % win rate, and yet be very respectably profitable.
And I think averaging up is a very good example of how one might do that - in a way that, while very tricky and frustrating, leverages the times when you are 100% right about a move, and onboard and leveraging the peformance by throwing more wood on the fire. The more wood, the bigger the fire. You just don't want it to rain!

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