Prudent Risk Management Is The Only True Edge In TRADING

Discussion in 'Risk Management' started by Buy1Sell2, Jul 6, 2015.

Is Prudent Risk Management the only true edge in trading?

  1. Yes

    55 vote(s)
    30.7%
  2. No

    124 vote(s)
    69.3%
  1. ironchef

    ironchef

    Thanks.

    I need to think about this carefully because my options win rate is only about 30% but I don't compound. On the other hand, if I ever find a winning day trading method, I will compound and this is very relevant.
     
    #851     Oct 11, 2023
    taowave likes this.
  2. savoir

    savoir

    You asked what should you do. Lacking any details, I don’t know what you should do. I didn’t take your post as being argumentative and I would like to be responsive to your question but I’m not sure how. Here is my attempt.

    I know you trade stocks intraday. I trade stocks for longer cycles. I stated that a stop loss is a poor way of managing risk. But for stocks, since I don’t continuously monitor my positions, I use stops and consider it a cost of doing business.

    For short-term trading I use stock index futures that I monitor continuously, and using a stop loss to manage risk makes no sense. There is one exception and that is when the market is moving faster than it is possible for my senses to keep up.

    I have been questioned by newbies and seasoned losers about my view and I always answer the same: You have elected to spend your time in front of the screens to monitor minute to minute and yet you sit there watching the market move to your stop loss to take you out of a trade. Why bother? Go swing trade stocks and do something more useful with your time.

    Of course we all know the real reason for the use of stop losses. It is not to protect people from the market but to protect people from themselves. People can’t be trusted or they don’t know to do what is necessary when it conflicts with what they hope for, want or expect.

    Regarding R:R ratios being a joke, the post above referencing a chapter in a book illustrates it as well as I would be able to. I know the post was serious, and that makes it funnier, but I am loathe to explain a joke to a person who doesn’t get the funny part. Just think about the assumptions made in order to keep the math tidy. Garbage in, garbage out.
     
    #852     Oct 12, 2023
  3. ironchef

    ironchef

    Thanks for your answers.

    I trade two different instruments. Options since 2013 and since early this year, experimenting with day trading stocks, a new "trick" for this old dog.

    For options, I only go long, calls or puts depending on my opinion, the premium is my stop, R:R is usually a 10X potential. Positive expectancy since 2014. By positive expectancy I mean 10 year CAGR is a few % better than 10 year QQQ CAGR.

    For day trading, I am a noob. Don't have a hard stop, basically stop loss is based on what you guys call "price action"? No R:R since I am trend following and don't know how to set a R:R yet. So far, three weeks of live trades with reduced size has positive expectancy.

    Do you have any suggestions how i can improve my day trading, i.e., stop loss and R:R?
     
    #853     Oct 12, 2023
  4. savoir

    savoir

    I have no suggestions. Day trading stocks isn’t my thing. It used to be my thing when the market structure was highly favorable for day trading stocks. That was back in the late 1990s before decimalization.

    Now you have dark pools and sub-penny trading. Day trading stocks looks to me to be a difficult grind. Yet you seem to have organized yourself to make a go of it. Hats off to you.
     
    #854     Oct 13, 2023
    ironchef likes this.
  5. taowave

    taowave

    Very odd post..

    Stops suck,but you use them as you are a swing trader?? Of course they are a cost of doing business ..So is health insurance..

    My post is one of the few posts ( maybe someone discussed Kelly)on this thread which actually puts some numbers behind the madness.
    Of course one must guesstimate Hit Rate,but there is no way around it.

    Ild love to hear your risk management technique,as you are the only swing trader I have ever heard state that stops are a poor way of managing risk..

    As a derivatives guy,I am going to assume you aren't bringing option hedges into the discussion..


     
    #855     Oct 14, 2023
  6. savoir

    savoir

    I thought my post was unambiguous. You must have skipped over the part where I said I don’t use stop losses for futures and my rationale.

    I also gave my rationale for using stop losses in my stock trading—I cannot monitor my positions as I do for futures. Relying on a stop loss is a poor way of managing risk but still better than leaving an unmonitored position without one. I don’t use options.

    It’s good to always have a failsafe. For futures I limit the size of the account and I use more than one. From experience I know that parking money in a futures account is not a good idea.

    Guesstimating hit rates is a joke to me. What exactly is a hit? All trades after entry go into both loss and profit, not necessarily in that order and not necessarily just once. It is overly simplistic to think of a series of actions as discrete trades to tally up and determine a batting average, especially when almost always in.

    I’m referring to trading futures in the above paragraph and I’m speaking for myself only, of course.
     
    #856     Oct 14, 2023
  7. Jzwu2017

    Jzwu2017

    I use stops to protect from myself. I tend to hold losers forever and add to losers if possible. It’s simply human psychology.

    If I don’t have a clear stop price I just use 1% loss rule. Otherwise, I use whatever clear stop price point as I see.
     
    #857     Oct 14, 2023
    comagnum likes this.
  8. taowave

    taowave

    So you believe the Kelly/Modified Formula is a joke??

    Still do not understand why a stop loss is a poor way of managing risk ? As a value investor I totally get it,but not for swing trading...

    Whats your preferred method of "risk management"..??


     
    #858     Oct 14, 2023
  9. savoir

    savoir

    It’s a formula. GIGO

    I explained it a couple of ways. I’m out of words.

    Already answered. Don’t over leverage.
     
    #859     Oct 14, 2023
  10. taowave

    taowave

    OK,you are an investor..no need to explain more


     
    #860     Oct 14, 2023