Originally posted by peanuts
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Skiracer's stock slopes
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THE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
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Ski,
Unless we are using exact dollar amounts for each entry position, the percentages gain/loss really are misleading. Although I try to be close in amount per position it often is impossible especially when a GOOG is put in the mix. However, any way you look at it a gain is better than a loss.
-----------billyjoe
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Originally posted by Runner View PostHere is an example. say you risk 8% on each position. This means you bail at a 8% loss. Now if you are not selling for at least a 8% profit on each position and sell with only .50 or 2% profit then you have a negative expectancy system. This system would not be very profitable in the long term. This means you are willing to let a 8% loss occur and not an 8% profit. Does this make any sense?
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Originally posted by Runner View PostHere is an example. say you risk 8% on each position. This means you bail at a 8% loss. Now if you are not selling for at least a 8% profit on each position and sell with only .50 or 2% profit then you have a negative expectancy system. This system would not be very profitable in the long term. This means you are willing to let a 8% loss occur and not an 8% profit. Does this make any sense?
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Originally posted by Tatnic View Postyes that makes sense assuming everything works as you laid it out. But I still think that for the majority of investors, they'll achieve much better, long term (by that I mean years) gains if they keep things simple. Trading for most people is a losing proposition or that's my hunch. They'd be better off buying a proper mixture of stocks and bonds and adjusting that mixture periodically...at least that's my guess. People's biggest enemy is themselves.
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Originally posted by skiracer View PostI didn't discredit your numbers although you did make a major mistake as Tatnic pointed out with FMD which I didn't even notice.Hide not your talents.
They for use were made.
What's a sundial in the shade?
- Benjamin Franklin
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Originally posted by Runner View PostSki does this make any sense?
I should be using a different terminolgy in that the only ones that count really are the one's that are closed out for whatever reasons. As long as they are open you don't have anything except to say that the position is up or down a certain amount or percent. I'm going to go back over the whole thing and see exactly what has been closed and the gain or loss and the percent.THE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
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Originally posted by Runner View PostHere is an example. say you risk 8% on each position. This means you bail at a 8% loss. Now if you are not selling for at least a 8% profit on each position and sell with only .50 or 2% profit then you have a negative expectancy system. This system would not be very profitable in the long term. This means you are willing to let a 8% loss occur and not an 8% profit. Does this make any sense?
But what are you assuming as the "success rate" (that is, the rate of successful trades, or positive outcomes, versus negative)? You certainly have a negative expectancy, for instance, if you assume (or, you know from your experience of your actual trades) that there is only a 50-50 chance of a -8% trade vs. a +2% trade.
Tharp's book goes over all of this. The trader must have already done some trades given his/her own trading methodology or system to have some history of the trading success rate. Using that success rate is required to determine whether you will have a negative or positive expectancy. There are systems, even mechanical ones, that produce a low success rate but each success produces a very high return. That combination can result mathematically in a positive expectation trading system.Last edited by Guest; 10-21-2006, 04:25 PM.
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Originally posted by peanuts View PostSki, I'm not beyond making mistakes, or pointing out the error of my ways. What is the number that you have listed as the entry price for FMD?Last edited by skiracer; 10-21-2006, 04:46 PM.THE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
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The watchlist is actually only up 2.93 % over the course of the 4 week period that I have been doing it. I've revised it so that it will only reflect the gains or losses on the closed positions. Sorry that I misled anyone. It wasn't intentional and was only meant to convey the gains or losses in the individual stocks each week. Somehow it got misconstrued. Mostly with the format that I used. If you were to look you would see that some weeks the open positions were carried over to the following week and the figures actually wouldn't have reflected the true gain or loss percentages, especially if the positions weren't closed out. Except for ACLS all the open positions from last week were carried over. And the 2.93 % doesn't reflect the true gains or losses according to my position sizing.THE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
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Ski, here is a pretty cool program that can do all the work for you. You would not need to mess with excell. Here is the link. I think it cost about 30.00 not sure as I don't remember.http://www.tradetrakker.com/main.php
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Originally posted by Runner View PostSki, here is a pretty cool program that can do all the work for you. You would not need to mess with excell. Here is the link. I think it cost about 30.00 not sure as I don't remember.http://www.tradetrakker.com/main.phpTHE SKIRACER'S EDGE: MAKE THE EDGE IN YOUR FAVOR
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Ski I do own the program and I like it. I think the time delay is about 20 minutes. I also think it has a 30 day guarantee should it not be for you. here is a screen shot I took of the program. All you do is enter the tic and the rest of the info and that is it. It will update for you based on your criteria.
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