Trading Math Part II Risk vs Reward

adam_woodsRisk vs. Reward

Last week I wrote an article titled Trading Math and received quite a bit of positive response from it. The article discussed the importance of keeping your losses small and letting your winners run. This week, I want to follow up with a brief introduction to risk and reward in capital markets. Put simply, every transaction on Wall Street presents a chance to both win and lose. In the simplest sense, successful traders make more money than they lose and unsuccessful traders do the opposite. The risk of the trade is the difference between your entry price and your exit price, if you are wrong. The reward of the trade is the difference between your exit and entry prices, when you exit with a profit.

How Unsuccessful Traders View Risk & Reward

Most people get caught up in the headlines and do not properly understand statistics, especially on Wall Street. For example, if someone tells you their win loss ratio is 90 to 10 (meaning they win 90% of the time and lose 10% of the time). At first blush you might consider that to be a very healthy win-loss ratio. But what if I told you that you can still lose money by winning 90% of the time and that ratio in and of itself has nothing to do with whether or not someone is a successful trader. The key is to understand Trading Math and look at the amount of money you win vs the amount of money you lose when wrong. The following exaggerated example will help illustrate this point:

Trader A: 90/10 Win rate

Trader A placed tend trades and won nine times and lost once. In this example, the trader won $1 for each winning trade (total won $9) and lost $10 when she was wrong (total lost $10). As you can see in this simple example, even though the trader had a 90% win rate, the trader still ended up losing money difference = negative $1). So clearly, the overall win-loss ratio is misleading and has nothing to do with the bottom line. Let’s take a look at trader B

Trader B: 1/99 Win Rate

Trader B placed one hundred trades and only won one time and lost ninety-nine times. In this example, trader B lost $1 for every losing trade (total $99) and won $199 on her one winning trade. In this example, the trader ended up making money even though she lost 99% of the time!

How Successful Traders View Risk & Reward

Successful traders think in probabilities, not absolutes. They know that anything can happen on Wall Street and are prepared for any possible outcome, before they risk a penny. As we approach the end of the year (and quarter), I like to do an inventory of all my trades and study my actions, learn from my mistakes and see how I can improve my process. I also know that most successful traders have a win loss ratio of close to 40/60. Meaning they only win 40% of the time but end up making a lot of money because they cap their losses and let their winners run. I show MidasWave.com members exactly how to do this in real-time. Here’s to a VERY strong 2015!

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