Remek! Trading Systems

View Original

The number one job in trading

While many new traders tend to focus on profits, job Nr. 1 for any trader must be to stay in the game. How so?

Well, after all, this is a game of probabilities, and probabilities, by definition, play out over a large number of bets. So for our edge to surface, we need to be able to place a large number of trades. And for that, we, obviously, must stay in the game. So there you go: job nr. 1 must be to stay in the game.

We must then, firstly, create a situation where blowing our account becomes - since we can’t say “impossible” in trading - highly, highly, highly unlikely. In other words: we have to cover our backs first. But covering our backs, i.e. defense is not the most exciting thing to ponder in the trading community, so very little is said about it and it is hardly ever discussed.

But like the construction of a house must start with the foundation, and cannot start with the windows, a sound trading plan must start by securing the account, by covering our backs, by protecting our downside, by mitigating catastrophic risk. Only with that done do we have the foundation we can build the rest of our trading plan on.

So let’s spend a few minutes covering the bases: in the chart below, simply enter the number of trades in the yellow cell our probabilitistic calculations will be based on. Any large enough number will do, and we’ll just use 1,000 to start this thought experiment. (P(w) means the probability of win.)

See this content in the original post

Here is the above chart in table format:

See this content in the original post

In the above examples, systems range from 10% accuracy to 90% accuracy. As you see, a system with a 50% accuracy is likely to produce a winning/losing streak of 10 over 1,000 trades, while the theoretical system with a 90% accuracy is expected to produce a winning streak of 66 (with an expected losing streak of 3).

There’s a lot to discuss here, but let’s stay on target: we must trade with an account that is big enough to withstand the worst-case scenario, i.e. the expected longest losing streak. And withstand it with a smile!

For the math, you will need three inputs: the accuracy, the win/loss ratio and the number of trades. (Backtesting, forward-testing, SIM trading, market replay, whatever… just know the metrics of your system, as you trade it!)

Once you have the above metrics, you’re ready to calculate the account size required by your strategy: the account size that is big enough to handle the worst-case scenario it is expected to encounter. How big exactly, the following table can help you figure out:

See this content in the original post

Do Job Nr. 1, if you haven’t yet, and do it now. Your trading account will thank you for it!

Happy calculating, mindful trading!

PS, for the advanced Remek! trader: yes, we can do similar calculations in ATRs, using our unique Remek! Converter. A cool idea for an upcoming blog post!

See this gallery in the original post