JesseLivermoreII said:
I would be very interested to know from you guys what my expectations should be profit-wise from a small spreadbetting account.
If I have e.g. £1000 in my SB account. I risk say 5% per trade max which = £50. What % or £ would be an average / a good/ a great trade return ?
Is this figure related to my equity or my risk ?
Look forward to your views,
many thanks,
Chris
I think that there are a number of factors here that you should consider.
1. Strategy - are you going to adopt a swing trade strategy (longer running trades with larger stop losses) or an intraday strategy (effectively short term day trading with specific targets and small stop losses).
2. Orientation - are you comfortable to play both sides of the market (long & short) or are you more comfortable in focusing just upon long or short opportunities.
3. Markets - what market or markets do you plan to trade - indices, equities, forex, commodities etc.
4. Trading - what trading parameters should you use. How often do you plan to trade, what proportion of your bank will you apply to each trade and how many markets will you trade.
5. Money Management: Pay attention to what you are doing and apply discipline to managing your trades within the criteria that you have laid down. Stick rigorously to your planned trading pattern
6. Timeframe - over what timeframe do you expect to measure your return.
I think that these are the fundamentals to consider first (there are many other issues but addressing these 5 will get you started).
A few observations:
Strategy:
Swing or intraday or both ?. First base is how much time do you have to devote to this ? Swing trades are easier to manage on a day to day basis and you can handle this by just monitoring your markets a couple of times a day. Intraday trading requires close monitoring of your chosen markets throughout the the timeframe of your trade. This means that you have to set a specific period of time aside to place your trade, monitor it and close it out.
Orientation:
Psychologically are you more comfortable playing either side of the market or by looking for long or short opportunities.
Markets:
Some markets are more dynamic than others. For instance indices and forex are very volatile (greater opportunities to make and lose money) whilst equities tend to be more stable, long term plays (except where you get surprise profit warnings or some major upheaval that affects the company or sector concerned). If you are going to trade indicies start with at least two so that you don't have all your eggs in one basket and you also get exposure to variable trends.
Trading:
For volatile markets, particularly indicies, once you've decided on your strategy and orientation then your indicated risk level, of around 4% to 5% of your bank, is probably a good starting point . You would have to have 25 or 20 consecutive losing trades to wipe out your bank and if that were to happen then you probably shouldn't continue SB since your ability or the signals that you use to identify trading opportunities are not good enough.
If trading indices then for swing trades start off with stop loss levels of around 1% on the larger markets (Dow, Nikkei etc) and maybe 1.5% - 2% on the smaller volume markets (FTSE, DAX, SPX etc). Trail your stop loss towards your entry point and then past it as the market moves in your favour to lock in profit. Don't expand your stop loss if the market moves against you to keep your position open.
On intraday trades use around 0.2% - 0.25% of the index volume as a stop loss since you are looking for quick in and out trades with a profit target, which will probably based upon a similar % to your stop loss. You might closeout when you've achieved this target or alternatively trail your stop loss up or down to 75% of your target if you feel the market is moving further in your favour and want to speculate on an opportunitic higher return. This will lock in 75% of your target profit if the market suddenly turns against you.
Money Management:
Stick to your planned trading system. Don't vary your stake per trade within the same market even if you have a run of two or three winning trades. Keep trading even if you have a run of two or three losing trades (this can be hard to do sometimes and was a big mistake that I made when first starting out).
Timeframe:
Look at 6 months to a year to gauge your initial return. You can have a run of profitable or losing trades in the shorter term which will distort you perceived performance. I think that an annual basis is best , just like the timeframe one uses to measure most other types of investment.
As you acquire experience (and this can only be acquired by actually trading, not from books or simulations, although you should certainly use one or both of these first before you actually start) then you can refine and finesse your strategy and trading methods. It is critically important that you actually start to trade and experience the reality of the action with the risks of success and failure. You might want to reduce your trades to perhaps 2.5% of your bank for the first two or three months until you feel more comfortable and get used to trading in order to limit any initial losses.
Hope this is useful for you - if you use these boards you'll get good advice from many others here that can help. Nobody is competing with another, we are all competing with the market.
Good luck with your trading !