wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
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Do you try and anticipate falls to get in before they happen, or wait till they start then get in?wayneL said:it has been due to being short the indexes, gold and stock, but there was some very lucky timing which worked my way... pure @rse.
GreatPig said:Wayne,
Do you try and anticipate falls to get in before they happen, or wait till they start then get in?
If the former, how long were you short before this correction started, and how long would you have stayed short if the correction hadn't happened?
I remember Nick's post about being short the index with CFDs based on his analysis on a day when it pushed up a significant amount instead. Knowing my luck, the correction would start the moment I exited the position at a loss.
Cheers,
GP
GreatPig said:Thanks, Wayne.
Sounds like options & futures have as many fancy names for things as candlestick charting.
Perhaps the creators spent too much time watching old Chinese kung-fu movies.
Cheers,
GP
MichaelD said:Wayne,
I'm interested in your opinion (or for that matter anyone else's opinion) on where I should concentrate my further investigation of the market. (Perhaps many others will be in the same boat as I).
I have a long term trading methodology with positive expectancy and what I consider to be a few decent edges.
Obviously, this isn't going to do much for me during bear markets.
Having looked at various bear market strategies, none of them particularly gel with my psychology. I certainly haven't stopped looking or thinking, but now I'm thinking outside of the square a little. I do, however, like things to be rule-based and mechanical.
Perhaps trading the system on decorrelated markets may be a better option for me - this presumes that somewhere on this planet in some trading instrument at any given time there is a bull market which I can profit from.
Do you (or any other experienced trend traders out there) have any comments on this?
Commodities? Forex?
If either of the above, any good texts to start reading?
MichaelD said:Wayne,
I'm interested in your opinion (or for that matter anyone else's opinion) on where I should concentrate my further investigation of the market. (Perhaps many others will be in the same boat as I).
I have a long term trading methodology with positive expectancy and what I consider to be a few decent edges.
Obviously, this isn't going to do much for me during bear markets.
Having looked at various bear market strategies, none of them particularly gel with my psychology. I certainly haven't stopped looking or thinking, but now I'm thinking outside of the square a little. I do, however, like things to be rule-based and mechanical.
Perhaps trading the system on decorrelated markets may be a better option for me - this presumes that somewhere on this planet in some trading instrument at any given time there is a bull market which I can profit from.
Do you (or any other experienced trend traders out there) have any comments on this?
Commodities? Forex?
If either of the above, any good texts to start reading?
My personal answer to that is to take swings on stocks and commodities
That depends on how you define gain - in particular, what you use as the denominator.wayneL said:On the short side, you are restricted to 100% gains
GreatPig said:Wayne,
That depends on how you define gain - in particular, what you use as the denominator.
Generally it is defined as profit divided by capital outlay. With a short position, the capital outlay is at the end, and that should be the denominator, not the revenue received at the start.
So if you received $10K and then spent $5K to buy back, the gain should be calculated relative to the $5K, not the $10K (ie. 100%, not 50%). This then gives exactly the same return as if the reverse had occurred as a long position, and could potentially lead to infinite gains (if the stock went to zero).
Cheers,
GP
Are you saying that if you go short and receive $10K, you have to pay $5K of that as a margin deposit? And do you actually get the $10K at the time of going short, or not until the trade has been closed out? (I've never done shorting, so I'm not sure how it works)wayneL said:The capital outlay will in fact be the margin you have to deposit to maintain the position. In the US this is 50% whether the position is short or long.
I have indeed thought of this and tested many, many potential systems to date. So far, I have not been able to come up with a positive expectancy short system. As Wayne points out, the 0 at the bottom gets in the way. It doesn't mean I'll stop looking, but I haven't worked one out yet - hence my query re simply applying the one thing I do have that does work to other markets to even out my equity curve.Snake Pliskin said:I see you refer to the system. Have you thought about multiple systems for all conditions?
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