An interesting article:

http://www.turtletrader.com/just-like.html

So how much thought have you given to money management recently? Or are you
still too preoccupied by all kinds of indicators or fundamental buy, sell
and holds to focus on the subject?

Eventually, however, you've got to ask yourself the most important question
of all: "how much?" right?

Getting a straight answer to that one may be tough. There's still a lot of
confusion about risk or money management from so-called gurus. I recently
saw the following comment regarding money management from a "guru":

"[We] use very simple money management: Trade one contract per trading
signal in the markets . with no pyramiding."

This is NOT money management. When you hear someone describe money
management like this trading guru, run don't walk the other direction as you
are about to be conned.

So if money management isn't some set amount of shares or contracts picked
out of thin air, what is it? Money management answers the question of "how
much?" At all times, given the risk you are taking, the money you have, and
the volatility of the market -- you must know the optimal number of shares
or contracts to be long or short.

In my opinion money management or position sizing or bet sizing just doesn't
get the attention it deserves. Gibbons Burke of MarketHistory.com
<http://www.markethistory.com>  observes:

"Money management is like sex. Everyone does it one way or another, but not
many like to talk about it and some do it better than others. But there's a
big difference: Sex sites on the Web proliferate, while sites devoted to the
art and science of money management are somewhat difficult to find."

Money management is ultimately a defensive concept. It keeps you in the
game. For example, money management tells you whether you have enough new
money to trade additional positions. Trend followers all realize that you
need to make small bets initially to simply stay alive and play another day.
So, if you start at $100,000, and you're going to risk 2 percent, that will
be $2,000. You say to yourself, "Why am I only risking $2,000. That's
nothing compared to what I've got to bet." But that's not the point. First
things first. You can't predict where the trend is going to go, so you can't
afford to risk all of your capital out of the gate. Trend follower Craig
Pauley points out:

"There are traders who are unwilling to risk more than 1% but I would find
it surprising to hear of any trader who risks more than 5% of assets per
trace. Bear in mind that risking too little doesn't give the market the
opportunity to allow your profitable trade to occur."

Think about money management as you would about getting into physical shape.
You can't lift weights six times a day for hours each day for 30 straight
days without hurting yourself. There's an optimum amount of lifting you can
do per day that gets you ahead without setting you back. You want to be at
that optimal point just as you want to get to an optimal point with money
management. Trend follower, Ed <http://www.seykota.com>  Seykota, author of
The Trading Tribe book, describes this optimal point with his concept of
"heat".

"Placing a trade with a predetermined stop-loss point can be compared to
placing a bet. The more money risked, the larger the bet. Conservative
betting produces conservative performance, while bold betting leads to
spectacular ruin. A bold trader placing large bets feels pressure - or heat
- from the volatility of the portfolio. A hot portfolio keeps more at risk
than does a cold one. In portfolio management, we call the distributed bet
size the heat of the portfolio."

Trading correctly is 90% money management, a fact that most people want to
avoid or don't understand. However once you have money management down, your
personal psychology will be 100% of your trading success. Once you have the
rules, you still need to follow them!

Why then do traders have such trouble keeping their trading proportional?
Why is it so hard for them to find that optimal point? Fear. Trend follower
Tom Basso points out that traders usually begin trading small and then as
they get more confident increase their trading size. Once they get to a
certain comfort level of say, 1000 contracts, they often stay there,
suddenly fearful that turning up the "heat", to use Seykota's term, will
increase their risk. For trend followers like Basso, the goal is to keep
things on constant leverage.

Few traders make the move to a proactive posture in which risks are actively
managed for a more efficient use of capital. How do you avoid trading less
instead of trading the optimal amount at whatever capital you have? You need
to create an abstract money world. Don't think about what money can buy.
Just look at the numbers like you would when playing a board game like
monopoly or risk.

And since your capital is always changing, it's important to continually
rebalance your portfolio. Trend follower Paul Mulvaney points out that,
"Trend following is implicitly clear about dynamic re-balancing which is why
I think successful traders appear to be fearless. Many hedge fund
methodologies make risk management a separate endeavor. In Trend Following
it is part of the internal logic of the investment process."

There it is: the key is a risk understanding. That's what money management
is really all about. Managing risk.

 

 

Warmest Regards,

 

 

Aditya

www.trend-traders.com

The Trend Trader

 

<<image001.jpg>>

Kirim email ke