Your maths are a bit out there, but if the marginlender will give 75% on WPL, your portion will be 25%eg. WPL gr 75%, does that mean I can put in $15 and the lender will put in an additional $75 giving me a $100 investment. ??
No, thats wrong. At that point you have no more credit left to buy more stocks. Each marginlender has a buffer, usually between 5% & 10% of portfolio beyond the ratio before you will receive a margin call.Also if I did gear to the full amount eg 75%, does that mean as soon as the share price drops below what I initial paid for them I get a margin call???
Yes, thats right, so the no.1 step is to have a consistantly winning strategy, otherwise you will be digging your hole much quicker.I do understand the risks with leavaging as well, as it not only magnifies your increases, it will magnifiy your losses as well if the market turns against you.
Well most anyway.Any idiot can make money leveraged into a bull market.
rozella said:G'day Andrew,
Yes, thats right, so the no.1 step is to have a consistantly winning strategy, otherwise you will be digging your hole much quicker.
On the positive side, once that the no.1 step has been achieved, marginlending can be a very good tool.
I can't agree with BSD's comments, unless it is in the hands of a novice, but if trading is your profession, then you will have risk procedures in place. Marginlending teaches you to become a disciplined trader, & yes I agree that
Well most anyway.
--so he should if he is trading long then thats why he is in the market---to take advantage of bull runs.As for any idiot can make money in a bull market
tech/a said:Question---Is then a good trader in a bullmarket one that can make profit going Short?
OR
In a Bear Market one who can make a profit going long?
Personally I believe anyone who can take advantage of a Bullmarket,Property booms,Business opportunity,is a pretty happy idiot.
The complete idiots are however those who judge the idiots and do bugger all smuggly content that they are "not at risk" when the crash comes---which they can see very clearly---funny how they couldnt recognise opportunity and take advantage of it isnt it.
tech/a said:Agree.
However discretionary traders have a misguided veiw of Risk management blindly following Fixed Fractional position sizing (generally) with no idea of their Win/Loss Ratios and no concept of Reward/Risk ratios let alone having a benchmark.Throw in unknown initial drawdown,and maximum run of losses,all without a blueprint to benchmark against and all the Money Management in the world will simply slow down the leak.
M/M alone will not guarentee a consistant profit.
wayneL said:Tech,
These comments re discretionary trading are as narrow minded as Ducs views. Discretionary doesn't mean undisiplined just as mechanical doesn't necessarily mean disiplined.
I will use the example of Nick. He may have his mech systems, but a lot of what I see him talk about is rule based discretionary. And I wouldn't go about accusing Nick of being misguided.
Also, a mechanical system doesn't do those things in the short term either. If you take the next twenty mechanical signals, you will have no idea what your drawdown, win/loss or risk/reward ratios will be.
Perhaps some mech traders have the misguided view brought on by a rampant bull?
Maybe you should alter your premise to be about "undisiplined" traders rather than use the word discretionary.
No even with a Disciplined Discretionary method they have absolutely no idea whether they have a profitable method.
wayneL said:Tech, I will respond in more detail later as I have people to see over the weekend, but I just had to take this to task:
Absolute pure BS. I can use an adding machine too and numbers are numbers. You make the fatal asssumption that because you failed at discretionary trading then it can't work.
Sorry, it can, and does... even when daytradng (another sacred cow of the "it can't be done" brigade)
...later
tech/a said:I've been trading margin for years.
Think also that say you have a 40% Stock you cannot hold more than 40% of your portfolio value with that stock.
Never been a problem for me as my portfolio's are 8-12 stocks.
Worth mentioning also that if you have say $20K in cash deposit interest isnt charged until you use any of the lenders money and its only for the duration of that % of lenders money is used. Unlike a loan that is fully drawn and charged.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?