losing trade we would have a loss on only a portion of a position.
Rich and Bill called those chunks
units. Second, we used an inno-
vative method they devised for determining the position size for
each market. The method is based
on the daily movement of the
market either upward or downward in constant dollar terms. They
determined the number of contracts in each market that would
cause them
all to move up and down by approximately the same
dollar amount. Rich and Bill called the volatility measure
N,
although it
now is known more commonly as average true range.
That is the name given to it by J. Welles Wilder in his book
New
Concepts in Technical Trading Systems.
Since the number of contracts
we traded in each market was
adjusted for the volatility measure,
N, the daily fluctuations for any
specific trade tended to be similar. The concept of adjusting trade
size on the basis of volatility (position size)
has been written about
by others, most notably by Van Tharp in his 1998 book
Trade Your
Way to Financial Freedom and the second edition of that book, pub-
lished in 2007. However, in 1983 this was an extremely innovative
concept. At that time most traders adjusted
their position sizes in
various markets on the basis of loose subjective criteria or the bro-
ker’s
margin requirements, which were based only loosely on
volatility.
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