Trump has a secret gig on the side and an offshore account to pocket those ill gotten gains on the market drops. Surely, Michael Cohen (former attorney now felon) can't be the only one that was in his pocket. wrbtrader
Such Modesty!! ["Did you mean that?" No. No, I didn't. Nope. The man misunderestimates his own vacuity.]
Price movements are random and are not random, at the same time. High Sharpe ratios are predictive of huge blowups. The more stable the return, the more likely the blowup. Volatile funds lose money; but not as much as nonvolatile ones. Because of the past tense use of the word “traded” I’m left to assume this system doesn’t trade anymore... “When you're a trader you get a lot of calls from folks who found relationships that can produce a 10 Sharpe ratio. That means it's almost impossible to lose money on the trade. Sure enough, when you start trading you realize that the relationship was not there. Trading has less biases than statistics.” - Nassim Taleb from https://merage.uci.edu/~jorion/oc/ntaleb.htm Yea, price movement can be more predictable when signal emerges. But you’re drowning in noise majority of the days of the year. Prediction becomes easier when there is signal. Still, it is induction and you cannot predict the future where such prediction would matter the most even if you had a million data points. Hence why (maybe) your “successful” system that trades 64% win rate doesn’t trade anymore. Don’t get fooled, of all things, by Sharpe ratios!!!! (Below is simply for more info) From: https://merage.uci.edu/~jorion/oc/ntaleb.htm DS: Are all correlations suspect? NT: You can find a relationship between any two items if you look hard enough. It will be entirely spurious and have no predictive power but you will find one. To give you an idea, you'll always find what we call data miners who will show you that there is 100 per cent correlation between his great aunt's blood pressure and the back month Nikkei volatility. When you're a trader you get a lot of calls from folks who found relationships that can produce a 10 Sharpe ratio. That means it's almost impossible to lose money on the trade. Sure enough, when you start trading you realize that the relationship was not there. Trading has less biases than statistics. DS: What are the most common mistakes you see traders and risk managers making? NT: As a trader, my job is to understand biases and trade on them. There are all kinds of biases. The most common is the small sample bias. Let's say you have 1 to 1000 odds you will come home every day with a dollar and once in a while you lose $1000. Many traders show very steady incomes but they could be fooling themselves because they don't have a long enough period of time to chart their performance. Their Sharpe ratio will not be indicative. In option trading, there is a similar bias. Short premium option traders, typically those who sell out-of-the-money options, are more likely to make money on a daily basis and then blow up. Likewise the yield hogs, those traders who would take any risk for a few basis points. You can fool yourself with your Sharpe ratios, and you can fool all of the financial engineers, but you can't fool an old Chicago trader who went bankrupt twice. Another bias is what I call the size bias. If you have twenty thousand traders in the market, sure enough you'll have someone who's been up every day for the past few years and will show you a beautiful P&L. If you put enough monkeys on typewriters, one of the monkeys will write the Iliad in ancient Greek. But would you bet any money that he's going to write the Odyssey next? You know that because of the sheer size of the sample, you're likely to find a lucky monkey once in a while. But the same applies to traders. A third bias is the survival bias. Everybody will tell you that stock investing is a great idea because it's been back-tested by some serious Guru and if you bought one share of some stock during the revolution you would have owned the GNP of some banana republic. But you forget that your back testing is only on stocks that are alive today and did not cover stocks in imperial Russia that a rational investor would have bought at the beginning of the century. Many continental stocks were recycled into wallpaper. When you look at markets you are only looking at the remnants, the parts that have survived. Or take real estate. People always say it goes up. But that works only if you always bought in places that became fancy. Regarding your comment about your A grade in statistics. Congratulations on that, that is good for you. P.S. don’t allow win rates to fool you. Stating 64% win rate, by itself, means nothing. & luck absolutely had a factor in it, same way Jim Simons attributes the role of luck to Medallions Funds success & to his 2 year 12x return fundamental analysis driven fund in his early days. But of course luck didn’t play a role with your returns... Source:
I know luck(variance) is a factor, but with a 65% winrate in more than 3 thousand trades is not just luck.
I do not know enough about his strategy to comment further. At least you & I can agree that luck is a factor.
“Unlike a well-defined, precise game like Russian roulette, where the risks are visible to anyone capable of multiplying and dividing by six, one does not observe the barrel of reality.” - Nassim Taleb.
Been here a little while and its quite easy to tell who the quality contributors are. Here's a nice swansong from someone who clearly knew his stuff:
May I ask if you accept that luck played a role? It’s a yes or no question. Waiting for your response to my yes or no question. Note: Please remember, I'm only looking for a yes or a no. No need for details/explanations if it's a yes or a no. Edit: Putting this in so you don’t flee: If I don’t receive a response from you, I’ll take it as a yes.
luck /lək/ noun success or failure apparently brought by chance rather than through one's own actions. I don’t know about Mr Calhoun but I traded MES today and there was absolutely no luck involved. No chance. It was pure skill. The Price action was there and I was astute enough to discern it and read it correctly therefore some $$$ were made. There was absolutely no luck involved. Either I read it right or I didn’t. Either my skill was spot on or it was off. You can read all about it and the explanations of the trade in this thread right here: https://www.elitetrader.com/et/posts/4929649/ No sirree ...NO LUCK. IT WAS SKILL. And I ain’t humble about it. Market doesn’t know if I am humble...arrogant..cool..or a piss ant. So, all the guru’s advice to be humble and count lady luck on your side for a good trade is nonsense. It just tickles me pink to mess with the gurus. ROFLMAO.. LISTEN ....The market is what it is. The market IS, therefore I trade. I read it right and make some jack, and momma goes to Dillards for clothes, or I read it wrong and momma goes to Dollar General. Actually, arrogant piss ants usually are more apt to make money than lose cause they will execute with confidence their skill set. The humble ones lose over and over. It is a BIG battle sonny boy and the best bastard wins. It is a battle between the bears and the bulls not a milk cow and a cub. Luck has no place in the markets. It is ALL about skill, good judgement, confidence, discipline, adaptability, nerves of steel, and proper execution, and the ability to read what price is doing. And a head screwed on with the right psychology embedded within that gray matter substance between one’s ears. We make our own way in the markets. No one to blame. No lady luck involved. If I make it it is because I did some things right. If I don’t make it it is because I did some things wrong. Mr T’ tweets or Fed policy..or economy ...or interest rates or companies going broke ... or white swans..black buzzards...fat tails..skinny tails..long or short tails..poor or rich...one just has to accept responsibility for their own participation in the markets and their own success or failure in the venture. I can blame none but me if I fail. I can celebrate me if I do well and thank God for the talents and abilities He has given me to develop and use. WE ALL MAKE OUR OWN BED OF ROSES OR THORNS. Signed Volpri