Thanks a lot for your very positive answer. It gives me hope again. Any idea if 
the examples in your PDF are before or after transaction costs ? Should be 
after of course but you never know. I understand that high frequency trading 
and more in particular lots of different stocks can give you a smooth equity 
curve. But my experience is that a high frequency system creates 'the most bang 
for my broker' in stead of for my bucket ...

And finally, yes that's what your email says : "a few percent on good days". So 
I assume that the good days represent the famous 20%, 30% is acceptable and 50% 
of the trades create a Stop Loss ...

Regards, Ton.



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Herman 
  To: Ton Sieverding 
  Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 11:36 AM
  Subject: Re: [amibroker] Re: Ideas for Swing Trading?



  Hi Ton, to be exact I wrote "a few percent on good days..."




  I found that trading smaller time frames and not staying in the market 
overnight reduces DDs significantly. 

  To see a typical example of what increasing frequency does to your DD see 
http://www.aima.org/uploads/Omega64.pdf




  Most high-performance EOD trading systems try to predict price movement, this 
in my opinion, is virtually impossible. imo, Success here can be equated with a 
lot of luck and good money management. On the other hand trading pure 
short-term volatility or noise, which varies far slower or is more constant if 
you like, and which is almost completely trend-immune, you can create systems 
with very small DDs. Further diversifying such systems by trading many stocks 
(10-100) you can create equity lines that make your mouth water. Such systems 
would be totally useless to traders trading large amounts of money however they 
would be perfect to the small trader. 




  Regarding "minimum code". About a dozen lines is it for most of my systems 
however automation code can easily run into 500-1000 lines of code.  




  A simple answer to your simple question: Yes.




  Of course compounding is impossible or at best limited, for these systems, 
that is simply common sense.




  best regards,

  herman




  Sunday, May 27, 2007, 3:35:44 PM, you wrote:




        >
       Herman thanks for your short resume of the Trading world. Just a simple 
question. Do you really believe that group number 1 exists ? So Traders that do 
generate with a minimum of code on a consistent basis a daily return of 2,5% 
without losing their pants on a terrible outlier or drawdown that will take 
them out of business ? My experience is that only a very small group of about 
5% of the '2,5%+ return Day Traders' is reaching for a relatively short period 
of time the above target ...



        Regards, Ton.





        ----- Original Message ----- 

        From: Herman 

        To: Howard B 

        Cc: [email protected] 

        Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 2:08 AM

        Subject: Re: [amibroker] Re: Ideas for Swing Trading?




        Every few years this type of discussion surfaces and it is great fun to 
read  




        It always surprises me how two types of traders can be so oblivious to 
each others' way of thinking. Consider two types of traders (ignoring the many 
types in between):




        1) Those who scan 100+ stocks in Real-Time and trade small lots of 100 
shares (or whatever the market allows) 5-100 times a day, easily making up to a 
few percent on good days, using an automated trading system. 

        2) Those who trade portfolios with 1000-10000 shares/trade and must 
roll over millions of dollars trading for others, making, if they are lucky a 
few percent/month.




        We have both of these traders on this list but really they should have 
their own lists, perhaps AmiBroker-Fat and AmiBroker-Skinny  their expectations 
are not and cannot be the same.




        In the first category volumes, market trends, market analysis, 
traditional TA, etc. play a minor role in system design. Their systems can be 
extremely simple and their trading rules may be expressed using only half a 
dozen lines of code while their automation code may easily exceed 1000 lines. 
Their trading screen may only display a lists of tickers with order status: no 
charts. They work hard to design and optimize code for maximum execution speed 
so that to can get their orders placed before the next quote comes in - speed 
translates in profits and 20-40 mSec execution is typical. 




        Almost everything for the second category is reversed: they thrive on 
traditional TA using many colorful chart-layouts, perhaps totalling 1000s of 
lines of code. Their automation code, if they  use it, may just be a a hundred 
lines long and aims to save them some typing - not to catch a trade. They use 
old (10-20 years!) techniques and statistical analysis that are rehashed over 
and over, they thrive on sophisticated analysis to squeeze out a fraction of a 
percent more per month (or reduce awful DDs). Code can be bloated with cosmetic 
stuff and its OK if it takes 5 minutes to execute. 




        Traders from both categories ought to respect each others.




        best regards,

        herman






















        Sunday, May 27, 2007, 5:27:22 AM, you wrote:




              >
             Hi Dennis --




              Averages 2.5% per day!?




              That same $1,000 starting account becomes $294,000,000 in two 
years.




              (1.025) ^ 510 = 294,558




              Please pass my email address on to your friend who gets 2.5% per 
day.  howardbandy at gmail.com  I have contacts who will reward him handsomely. 
 




              When Larry Williams ran $10,000 to $1,000,000 in one year and 
became famous for it, that required a return of 1.84% per day.  2.5% per day 
turns $10,000 to $5,039,800 in one year.  




              Help me understand -- Assume I can average 1% per day on, say, 
$100,000.  Every month, I start with $100,000 and make $24,471 on that 
$100,000.  Why would I pull my $24,471 profits out so that they can make 1% for 
the next month instead of continuing to trade them and making 24% for the next 
month? 




              And, yes, trading in size affects the market.  But if your friend 
is trading several times per day in markets with high liquidity and narrow 
bid-asked spreads, then $1,000,000 is still small size.  QQQQ and IWM each 
regularly trade $5 billion dollars a day -- $1,000,000 is 5 seconds worth of 
trading. 




              Pardon my skepticism --  




              Thanks,

              Howard

              www.quantitativetradingsystems.com










              On 5/26/07, Dennis Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

                    I know of more than one 1% per day method, but of course it 
will not work to compound.  That is not the way a true trader does it.  I know 
a trader who averages 2.5% per day on about 5 trades per day on one ETF, and 
holds no position overnight.  He pulls his profits out and lives on them or 
puts them to work in longer term investments.    High rates of return only work 
for small investments and usually require a lot of personal attention and 
pattern recognition during the day.  If it worked for large sums, or easy 
computer algorithms, the big boys (or hoards) would work that angle to death 
and the edge would get neutralized.  Once you try to increase position sizes 
above a certain amount, you start to influence the market and you have no one 
to play against --it takes two to have a market.  That is why large mutual 
funds must look to a fundamental value model.  They can not trade the 
technicals quick enough without killing the market.  A true trader will just 
work the market technicals to pull out a small amount of money at a consistent 
rate (no home runs).  Over time, the results add up to a decent living. 




                    Dennis










                    On May 26, 2007, at 4:02 PM, Howard B wrote:







                    One percent a day.  Yeah, right. 




                    Compound one percent a day for five years and a $1,000 
trading account becomes $278,000,000.  Start with real money and own Manhattan.




                    (1.01) ^ 1260 = 278,567




                    Howard







                    On 5/26/07, dralexchambers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

                    T-ohrt - the thing you are missing is not your technical 
ability, but 

                    your BELIEF and your ATTITUDE to new things.




                    You seem to mistrust my recommendation when in fact you 
nothing of 

                    me, my level of trading knowledge, this system or my 
involvement with 

                    it (my involvement is none other than my affiliate link - 
just to 

                    make that entirely clear).




                    If you believe that 1% a month is all that is possible, 
that will be

                    your reality, and you will discount ideas that make more as 
trickery. 




                    If you want trade lists, further explanations on the system 
I

                    recommended - discuss it with David, the author. It is not 
my job to

                    divulge a system that someone else owns.




                    However, I will say that David's system is very credible 
and also 

                    very simple. I have recieved a lot of support from David 
and his 

                    system opened my eyes to swing trading.




                    I also know of an individual who makes 1% A DAY - and 
publishes all 

                    his methods and indicators for free, online. 




                    Look for The Rumpled One at:




                    www.kreslik.com.




                    I am currently porting his work over to Amibroker on that 
site. 




                    And yes, once again - it is all FREE, and you definately 
won't find

                    it in your "Beyond Technical Analysis" book. 




                    AC



                   





             


       


   

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