from relatively infrequent occurrences,
those which happen once
or twice a decade; there are more common risks that one might
expect to occur a few times each year.
Most traders worry about
four primary risks:
•
Drawdowns: Strings of losses that reduce the capital in their
trading accounts
•
Low returns: Periods of small
gains in which one does not
make enough money to live on
•
Price shocks: Sudden movements in one or more markets
that result in
a large unrecoverable loss
•
System death: A change in market dynamics that causes a
previously profitable system to start losing money
Let’s examine each of these risks and
then consider assessments
that can be incorporated into risk/reward measures for evaluating
traders and trading systems.
Drawdowns
The drawdown is probably the risk that causes the most traders to
stop trading and results in the most traders ending up as net losers.
The equity curve shown in Figure 7-1 represents
the results of trad-
ing with an account of $100,000 from January 1996 until May 2006
using the Donchian Trend system.
From the graph, you can see that the equity has grown at an aver-
age compounded rate of 43.7 percent
over the slightly more than
10 years of the test. There was also a period during the test that
exhibited a 38 percent drawdown.
By What Measure?
•
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