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Kevin Davey

When To Stop Trading A System

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Submitted Thursday, October 15, 2009
Kevin Davey (39)
Kevin Davey

KJ Trading Systems
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It is easy to know when to start following an advisor or trading system - start trading as soon as you have determined it is the right investment for you. But, do you know when you'll stop following that new system?

Whether you are following your own trading system, or following an advisory, newsletter or some other service, if you don't have an exit plan for discontinuing it, you should.

Why? Studies have shown that when people are under stress, many times they make poor decisions. Certainly if you were losing money with your systems you would be stressed. Consequently, you might make a knee jerk reaction to the losses, or you may stick your head in the sand and avoid a decision all together. Both scenarios can be dangerous. So, the time when you are losing is a bad time to determine when to exit.

Ideally, you already determined when to stop trading when you first decided to trade the system. If not, it is not too late. Just determine the metric(s) that are most important to you. They could include such things as:

Maximum drawdown

Consecutive losers in a row

Amount lost in a week/month/year

Overall profit after X months

Overall winning percentage dips below XX %

Significant break in your personal equity trendline, or equity moving average

New highs, or breaking of another "good" metric (yes, some people try to quit at the top)

Anything that can be measured and monitored

The exact condition you select probably is not as important as writing it down and sticking to it. That is the key. It needs to be solid, definitive and written down. Ideally, you'll also tell your spouse or a friend, too, since it is harder to back out when you make the proclamation public.

I've heard that one money management firm's exit criteria is 1.5 times the maximum drawdown, and a 24 month commitment. Those aren't bad, but the best one is the one that you feel comfortable with - one you can stick with.

You'll definitely worry less about your system's performance if you write down and follow your exit plan - today!



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Comments on this article: (2 total)


» left by Shad Alan (42) (13 days 15 hours ago.)
Hi Kevin,
 
This is good advice.
 
What I have to do is to stick to what I have written down!
 
Thanks.

Respond to this comment
» left by Kevin Davey (27)
Kevin Davey
(13 days 14 hours ago.)

You are right - have a plan up front, and stick to it. Don't try to make decisions in the heat of battle - it is too difficult.

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Article added to SearchWarp.com on 10/15/2009 6:30:06 PM.
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Kevin Davey


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