- Joined
- 10 September 2007
- Posts
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- 1
Hi Everyone,
(I wanted to wait till I had the book with me so I could put the page no, but I'm at work so here goes anyways...)
[Caveat: I am a complete novice]
I am reading 'The Way of the Turtle' (Curtis Faith) [I'm about into ch 7] and it shows a graph of the returns using a (standard?) Donchian trend following system from 96-06 based on starting capital of $100K. At the end of the 10 years it is worth 5.5 Mil!!!
Assuming this is a 'standard' system that anyone (with the gumption and minimum intellect) could implement, why isn't everyone doing this now???
The chapter it appears in is explaining that the common affliction in following the system is the times that you need to take large (>50% sometimes) draw downs, and that a lot of people dont stick at it.
I am (very lightly) toying with the idea of lending 100K and doing it myself (possibly using a fund manager), as I think the market has at least another 3-5 good years of growth.
Any thoughts?
Rob
Hi motorway,
Actually at least for my system, the entry seems to be more important than the exit.
Random EXIT with my entry greatly outperforms Random ENTRY with my exit.
Hi Everyone,
(I wanted to wait till I had the book with me so I could put the page no, but I'm at work so here goes anyways...)
[Caveat: I am a complete novice]
I am reading 'The Way of the Turtle' (Curtis Faith) [I'm about into ch 7] and it shows a graph of the returns using a (standard?) Donchian trend following system from 96-06 based on starting capital of $100K. At the end of the 10 years it is worth 5.5 Mil!!!
Assuming this is a 'standard' system that anyone (with the gumption and minimum intellect) could implement, why isn't everyone doing this now???
The chapter it appears in is explaining that the common affliction in following the system is the times that you need to take large (>50% sometimes) draw downs, and that a lot of people dont stick at it.
I am (very lightly) toying with the idea of lending 100K and doing it myself (possibly using a fund manager), as I think the market has at least another 3-5 good years of growth.
Any thoughts?
Rob
Before trading ---- Which way is you market trending?
So, the adage "never confuse genius with a bull market" could not be more evident
Your kidding-----the publics fascination with Turtle Trading has come from their reputation not marketing.Clever marketing ploy?
Who said they could? <<removed>>So please tell how you can determine the trend for any market for the next 5 yrs?
You cant!
Don't tell me, it's the first line of code in your trading system?Love these idiotic sayings.
Yes Yes. Long and trending up. If you get on as they did in a down trend yes, they were damn lucky that trend turned into a strong bull run within months. Did they trade through the '87 crash?If your trading long thats exactly what you want (a bull market) evidently trading genuis is guaged by some as making a profit despite a trend.
Frankly Id rather be a dumb trend trader.(see above)
If you get on a trend it most likely will have little to do with genius and a lot to do with blind luck!
The trading system worked in a strong up trending market (like our 2003 2007 run) and going back to what I originally posted --- they hit a strong uptrend which produced exceptional results. That doesn't fascinate me.Your kidding-----the publics fascination with Turtle Trading has come from their reputation not marketing.
I love the bull baiting and will accommodate.
Who said they could? You, d.h.
Don't tell me, it's the first line of code in your trading system?
Yes Yes. Long and trending up. If you get on as they did in a down trend yes, they were damn lucky that trend turned into a strong bull run within months. Did they trade through the '87 crash?
The trading system worked in a strong up trending market (like our 2003 2007 run) and going back to what I originally posted --- they hit a strong uptrend which produced exceptional results. That doesn't fascinate me.
Yes you are right they traded commodities and a wide variety. A connection between the bull market and commodities is not appropriate due to the wide variety of commodities they traded which were not correlated to market bullishness.
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