Way of the turtle
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Way Of The Turtle
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- Risk of Ruin Revisited
- No plan
- Unrealistic expectations
Risk Per Trade (%)
Figure 8-1 Drawdown versus Risk Copyright 2006 Trading Blox, LLC. All rights reserved worldwide. • 112 • plex formulas and written entire books about money management. It shouldn’t be that complicated. Proper money management is quite simple. For a trading account of a particular size, you can safely buy a certain number of contracts in each futures market. For some markets and for smaller accounts this amount may be zero. For example, the natural gas (NYMEX symbol NG) contract ear- lier this year had an ATR that represented more than $7,500 per con- tract. Remember, this means that the value of the contract fluctuated $7,500 on the average each day. Thus, for a system that used a 2-ATR stop such as the Donchian Trend system, a single trade could mean a loss of $15,000. If you were trading an account as large as $50,000, this would represent 30 percent of the account. Most people would say that risking 30 percent of your trading account on one trade is a really bad idea. Therefore, a prudent number of contracts of NG to trade would be zero for an account of $50,000. Even for an account as large as $1 million, such a trade would represent a 1.5 percent risk level, which many would consider fairly aggressive. Trading with too much risk is probably the single most common reason for failure among new traders. Often novices trade so aggres- sively that a small string of losses will wipe out their trading capital. New traders often misunderstand the dangers of leverage, and because their broker and the exchange permits them to buy and sell large contracts with as little as $20,000, they often do precisely that. Risk of Ruin Revisited Earlier we discussed the concept of risk of ruin: The possibility of losing so much capital as a result of a string of losses that one is Risk and Money Management • 113 forced to quit trading. The definition as most people use it applies to a random set of outcomes using a fairly simplistic formula based on probability theory. Most people think in terms of the risk that you will experience ruin due to a bad period of losses in rapid succession. I believe that this is not generally what brings traders to ruin. Traders do not fall prey to a period of randomly adverse market behavior very often. It is far more likely that they have made some serious mistakes in their analysis. Here is what I believe accounts for a trader’s lack of success in trading commodities: • No plan: Many traders base their trades on hunches, rumor, guesses, and the belief that they know something about the future direction of prices. • Too much risk: Many otherwise excellent traders have been ruined because they incurred too much risk. I’m not talking about 50 percent or 100 percent more risk than is prudent. I have seen traders who trade at a level that is 5 or 10 times more than I consider prudent even for aggressive trading. • Unrealistic expectations: Many new traders trade with too much risk because they have unrealistic expectations about how much they can earn and what sorts of returns they can achieve. This is often also the reason new traders believe they can start trading on the basis of fundamental data; they believe they are smart enough to “beat” the market with little or no training and very little information. When I started working with futures trading systems in high school, I noticed something rather odd: A very high percentage of Download 6.09 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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