Is compounding necessary?

Oct 10, 2012 at 10:49
5,193 Paparan
78 Replies
myfxpt
forex_trader_43716
Ahli sejak Aug 06, 2011   345 hantaran
Nov 02, 2012 at 19:36
James_Bond posted:
@myfxpt I agree. In any case, this question can be only answered once you're profitable, and since most traders aren't, they never get to it.

Good point!
Ahli sejak Oct 27, 2011   86 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 09:55
I would say that it is definitely not necessary.

Once an account gets to 200% return it can be hard to manage emotionally. Fear and greed start to come into play and it will effect your trading.

I've seen it dozens of times with the great traders that join our trading room. They go well for 3 months, then tank.

If you start with a decent bank, then just withdraw your winnings you might find that fits better with your emotional resolve.
Find your passion and work hard
Ahli sejak Aug 22, 2012   170 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 10:24
If you're not compounding to some degree, you're making less and less as time goes on due to inflation. Compounding is the key to real wealth - ask Warren Buffet if he compounds his profits? Why limit your profits? Of course you should compound!
Ahli sejak Oct 12, 2012   70 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 12:07
But to answer the question 'Is compounding necessary?' it really depends on your bank.
If you have $100 to trade with and are happy with $20 in winnings per month, the question is no.

But for the 'risk of ruin'-discussions and percentages and so on - If you are trading with amounts that gives you a risk of ruin, you have to much at stake. Someone said that 'you should only risk so little that it almost seems like a waste of time to trade'.
Then you put the stress out and can concentrate on your way of trading.
Ahli sejak May 11, 2011   235 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 12:43
Compounding is based on interest (and is derived from interest), you can't technically compound in trading, as the amount you are 'compounding' is put back as risk to cover drawdown and new positions. If you mean compounding in terms of increased position sizing, you are compounding your risk, not your capital. I doubt Warren Buffet compounds his profits (I think he will chuckle if he hears that), he would use his profits to obtain investments elsewhere, called risk capital, based on a percentage of portfolio. (so he could double his risk capital - bonus! or lose it all - in which case only losing a small percentage on his entire basket of portfolios.)
For every loss there should be at least an equal and opposite profit.
Ahli sejak Aug 22, 2012   170 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 13:14
FYI compounding is not necessarily derived from interest - it is the re-investment of any gain by any means to increase future returns on the initial investment.

Maybe the question should have been 'Is compounding necessary to maintain your profit percentage?'
Ahli sejak Aug 22, 2012   170 hantaran
Nov 16, 2012 at 13:20
and I think Warren Buffet would have a good chuckle about all our comments - we're trading with what he'd term loose change 😁
Ahli sejak May 11, 2011   235 hantaran
Nov 18, 2012 at 21:17
incometrader posted:
FYI compounding is not necessarily derived from interest - it is the re-investment of any gain by any means to increase future returns on the initial investment.

Maybe the question should have been 'Is compounding necessary to maintain your profit percentage?'

I seem to be at odds with everyone lately, lol. Then I stand corrected, so if using the term synonymously with the term reinvestment, I guess you could refer to it as compounding if you were to continually reinvest your gains, and your current reinvested gains were more than your previous gains. Sound correct?
For every loss there should be at least an equal and opposite profit.
Ahli sejak Aug 22, 2012   170 hantaran
Nov 18, 2012 at 23:49
xgavinc posted:
I seem to be at odds with everyone lately, lol. Then I stand corrected, so if using the term synonymously with the term reinvestment, I guess you could refer to it as compounding if you were to continually reinvest your gains, and your current reinvested gains were more than your previous gains. Sound correct?

That sounds good lol. But also you could re-invest 'some' of your profit rather then all of your profit and still be compounding (I think) I don't know anymore lol.
Ahli sejak May 11, 2011   235 hantaran
Nov 19, 2012 at 09:47
As long as it's more than the previous amount, else it wouldn't be compounding. At least that is the way I see it 😁

I agree totally with James_Bond, it's all pointless if you aren't making a consistent profit though.
For every loss there should be at least an equal and opposite profit.
Ahli sejak Jun 21, 2012   18 hantaran
Nov 23, 2012 at 22:30
If you don't compound then you are missing out!
The only way to get smarter is by playing a smarter opponent
Ahli sejak Dec 19, 2011   20 hantaran
Dec 04, 2012 at 10:54
Compounding is necessary.I turned $25k to $700k before with compounding for a company...try it first on demo get used to it,make sure you learned the sticks around it.then do it live..
Ahli sejak Oct 15, 2012   29 hantaran
Dec 07, 2012 at 09:38
I can't imagine doing it any other way.
The Fine Art of Investment
myfxpt
forex_trader_43716
Ahli sejak Aug 06, 2011   345 hantaran
Dec 21, 2012 at 02:50
NickMcDonald posted:
I would say that it is definitely not necessary.

Once an account gets to 200% return it can be hard to manage emotionally. Fear and greed start to come into play and it will effect your trading.

I've seen it dozens of times with the great traders that join our trading room. They go well for 3 months, then tank.

If you start with a decent bank, then just withdraw your winnings you might find that fits better with your emotional resolve.

Maybe...
myfxpt
forex_trader_43716
Ahli sejak Aug 06, 2011   345 hantaran
Dec 21, 2012 at 02:52
Ironman posted:
But to answer the question 'Is compounding necessary?' it really depends on your bank.
If you have $100 to trade with and are happy with $20 in winnings per month, the question is no.

But for the 'risk of ruin'-discussions and percentages and so on - If you are trading with amounts that gives you a risk of ruin, you have to much at stake. Someone said that 'you should only risk so little that it almost seems like a waste of time to trade'.
Then you put the stress out and can concentrate on your way of trading.

It is not the 'amount' that constitutes Risk of Ruin, it is the longest losing streak and the amount lost per losing trade.
Ahli sejak Feb 19, 2012   1 hantaran
Jan 11, 2013 at 08:50
If you're making consistent profits and you compound, you will enjoy compounding. If you're inconsistent and you compound, you will be shooting yourself in the foot. I have a weekly target on my account, and because my trading strategy allows me meet this 'realistic' target consistently, I compound and I am happy to do so, over and over again. Bottomline, work on your trading, remain consistent and compound.
Ahli sejak May 22, 2012   106 hantaran
Jan 14, 2013 at 05:42
If your R:R is 1:1 or better, its better to compound. Say if you are risking 100 pips for 20 pips profits, compounding will be disastrous. As you gain money, you will be risking more pips when you compound. Also AHPR, which myfxbook provides is a good indicator to know if you need to compound or not. But again, if you dont compound your profits/losses will be constant which is not in anybodys interest :) As a human you always want to grow :)
Ahli sejak Dec 10, 2012   14 hantaran
Feb 16, 2013 at 09:01
domgilberto1 posted:
incometrader posted:

That's right your risk stays the same if your compound rate stays the same. But, if you want to reduce your risk as you grow your account, you may want to compound at a rate of 50% for example. What you're saying is fine for something like a term deposit where there is no risk, but with FOREX (as risky as it can be) it's wise to reduce risk.


I completely disagree. There is no logical reason to decreasing your risk percentage of your closing balance? If you choose 2% risk profile of your closing balance then it is always 2% of your closing balance...

Why would you decrease your risk profile on winning trades, and what, keep it in the same on losses? Or decrease it then too.... If you knew what you were talking about you`d fully understand the implications through back-testing and vigorously understanding how MM effects your bottom line through messing around with your risk profile....

I am not sure why I am even bothering explaining this or getting involved lol.


Do what AO said above^.




^^^
This
Rules of Trading: 1. Make Pips 2. Keep Pips 3. Repeat
Ahli sejak May 08, 2012   321 hantaran
Feb 16, 2013 at 13:24
Walloj;

Your risk is not only a measure of the percent wagered on each trade, it also depends on the systems that you trade. For the normal buy, sell, risk 2% on one trade at a time, you are absolutely correct. For the many many grid/martingale systems out there, you couldn't be more wrong. There is always the risk of the account blowing out at any time and you must transfer your closed profits out religiously until you have recaptured your initial capital.
War is when your government tells you who the enemy is. Revolution is when you figure out, for yourself, who the enemy is.
Ahli sejak Dec 10, 2012   14 hantaran
Feb 19, 2013 at 07:53
Michigander posted:
Walloj;

Your risk is not only a measure of the percent wagered on each trade, it also depends on the systems that you trade. For the normal buy, sell, risk 2% on one trade at a time, you are absolutely correct. For the many many grid/martingale systems out there, you couldn't be more wrong. There is always the risk of the account blowing out at any time and you must transfer your closed profits out religiously until you have recaptured your initial capital.

This is true, as well. Thank you.
Rules of Trading: 1. Make Pips 2. Keep Pips 3. Repeat
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