$0 to $100,000 Trading Rule: That Most Traders Get Wrong - YouTube

Channel: TRADING RUSH

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Would you do me another favor?
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By the end of this video, I can prove that the way you are trading right now is most
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likely wrong.
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But to prove that, I want you to look at these three back-testing clips, while I tell you
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a short story about how Warren Buffett made money when he was young.
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By the end of the story, these three back-testing clips will have the exact same win rate and
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will have risked 1% of the account per trade, and still, one of them will make way more
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money than the others.
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I want you to guess why one of them is making more money than the others because if you
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can correctly guess that, you will understand what Warren Buffett and these three clips
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have in common.
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See, before Warren Buffett started to make his billions, one of the businesses he ran
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involved setting up pinball machines in barber shops.
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Many times people have to wait in line before they can get their hair done, which can be
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quite boring.
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Young Buffett saw a business opportunity in this.
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In 1946, Buffett and his friend Danley bought a pinball machine for 25 dollars and installed
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it in a barber shop.
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Now, instead of getting bored, customers can play pinball while they wait.
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This business was a hit from day one.
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The first night, Buffett and Danley made 4 dollars, and after one week, they had already
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made 25 dollars in total.
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They reinvested this amount into the business, bought another pinball machine, and installed
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it in another barber shop.
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Then, the profit made from two machines was reinvested to buy 2 more machines.
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2 machines became 4, 4 became 8, and so on.
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They kept reinvesting the profit, and soon, Buffett had pinball machines in barber shops
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all over Washington, D.C.
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Young Buffett ended up selling the business, which he started with just 25 dollars, for
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over 1000 dollars after a year.
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This story and the 3 back-testing clips have one thing in common: the reinvesting part,
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and that's also the part most people get wrong.
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Recently, one of the members of the Trading Rush Discord Server asked: "how often is reinvesting
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profits recommended?".
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Since I personally reinvest, or in other words, compound whenever I'm approximately 30% in
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profit, that's what I replied.
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But then I remembered the Turtle Traders and their trading rules, and started to question
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if my method of compounding was even right?
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You see, in the previous episode, we saw how multi-millionaire Richard Dennis taught random
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traders how to make millions.
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These random traders were called turtle traders and they together ended up making more than
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175 million in around 5 years.
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One of the rules they followed was "risking only 2% of the account size on a single trade",
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which doesn't sound any different than the risk management rule most traders use today.
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However, if there was a 10% profit in the account, they were told to reinvest the profit,
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and risk 2% of the new total account size.
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Furthermore, if there was a 10% loss, they were told to risk 2% of the new smaller account
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size.
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See, in my compounding method, I am reinvesting the profit when I am up 30%.
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Furthermore, I'm adjusting my position size so that the risk per trade is 1 to 2% of the
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new and bigger account size.
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If I lose 30%, I'm not changing anything.
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But in Richard Dennis's compounding method, he is not only reinvesting and adjusting the
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position size when he is in profit, but he is also reducing the position size when the
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account size gets smaller.
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Which method of compounding is right?
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Which one makes more money?
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And does reducing the position size when there is a loss even make sense?
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To find out, I ran 5 experiments, took 600 trades, and simulated 9000 trades.
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The data you are about to see is not only surprising, but you will most likely end up
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using the best compounding method we have found.
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In the first experiment, we will test if reducing the position size when there is a loss is
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a good move or not.
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Here, I have the probability section of the Official Trading Rush App.
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On one side, we will simulate 1000 trades with no adjustment to position size when there
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is a loss.
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For example, we will risk 1% per trade, and if there is a loss, we will still risk 1%
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of the initial capital.
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On the other side, we will simulate 1000 trades, but this time we will reduce the position
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size when there is a loss.
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For example, if the account gets smaller, we will risk 1% of the current capital, and
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not 1% of the initial capital.
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To make sure there will be more losing trades in the experiment, I used a 30% win rate and
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a 1.5 to 1 reward risk ratio.
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As soon as I started the simulation, the account balances of these two accounts started to
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fall like it was a market crash.
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By the 400th trade, the first account that didn't use any adjustment methods and risked
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the same amount every trade, blew up the account.
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On the other hand, the second account where the position size was reduced when there was
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a loss, didn't blow up the account even after 1000 trades.
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Furthermore, at the 400th trade, the second account still had 40% of the initial capital
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left.
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The 1st experiment shows us that reducing the position size when there is a loss and
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when the account gets smaller is actually a good thing.
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But what if your win rate is good?
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Let's say your win rate is good like 55% and you are pretty confident in what you are doing.
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Then what?
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Will reducing the position size when there is a loss even make sense since we are not
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going to lose money in the long run?
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To find out, I simulated 1000 trades with a 55 percent approximate win rate on two separate
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accounts.
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The first account will compound when there is a profit, but will not reduce the position
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size when there is a loss.
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On the other hand, the second account will compound when there is a profit, but will
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also reduce the position size when there is a loss.
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As soon as I started the simulation, the account balances of these two accounts started to
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move in the upward direction.
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And after 1000 trades, the first account was up by approximately 3000%.
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What's interesting is that the second account was also up by approximately 3000%.
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The second account however was slightly better than the first one.
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What this means is, reducing the position size when there is a loss won't make a big
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difference in the long run if the win-rate is good, but since it significantly reduces
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the probability of making a big loss and blowing up the account in the short term, it is a
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better idea to reduce the position size when there is a loss and the account size gets
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smaller, just like the multi-millionaire Richard Dennis recommended to Turtle Traders.
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In the second experiment, to find the best compounding method, I opened the Trading Rush
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Website, selected the trading strategy that got the highest TR Score as well as the highest
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win rate after 100 trades.
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Then, I took 100 trades again on the exact same market structure 3 times.
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The First time, I didn't use any compounding method.
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The second time, I compounded when there was a 10% profit, and reduced the position size
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when there was a 10% loss.
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The third time, I compounded every time there was a profit and reduced the position size
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every time there was a loss.
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In this experiment, the account with no compounding or adjustment method made 55% profit.
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The account that compounded and adjusted the position size at 10% change made 68% profit.
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And the account that compounded and adjusted the position size after every trade, made
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71% profit.
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In other words, with the highest win rate trading strategy, compounding and adjusting
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the position size after every trade was the best compounding method.
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But what if, the results were too good because of the high win rate strategy?
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To make sure the data is correct, in the 3rd experiment I used the worst trading strategy
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we have ever tested 100 times.
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This strategy after 100 trades got a 33 percent approximate win rate with a 1.5 to 1 reward
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risk ratio.
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Since the win rate is so low, all three adjustment methods in the third experiment should make
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a loss.
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But, if our previous data is correct, and compounding and adjusting position size after
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every trade is actually the best method, then the same method should also make the lowest
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amount of loss with a bad strategy.
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And in the third experiment, it did.
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The account with no adjustment method made the highest amount of loss.
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The account that compounded and adjusted the position size at 10% change had a slightly
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lower loss.
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And the account that compounded and adjusted the position size after every trade had the
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lowest amount of loss.
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After looking at all of this data, we can safely say that we have found the best compounding
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and adjustment method, but unfortunately, not everyone has the same win rate in trading.
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The win rate in trading also depends on your Market View, on how good you are at identifying
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the good vs bad markets.
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I have shared how to identify the good vs bad markets in the Trading Rush Price Action
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Series, but let's see how compounding and adjusting the position size at every trade
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would look like with a 50% win rate.
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A 50% win rate is fairly easy to achieve.
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Even the Trade Alerts I gave on Patreon had a higher win rate than this.
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In the fourth experiment, I simulated 1000 trades with no compounding on one side, and
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1000 trades with compounding and adjustment after every trade on the other side.
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In the end, the account with no compounding was only up by 260%, whereas the account with
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compounding plus adjustment after every trade was up by 1300%.
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Even with a 50% win rate, compounding and adjusting position size after every trade
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made a big difference in the long run.
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But what if your win rate is even worse?
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Let's say you are an absolute beginner and are getting a win rate just above breakeven.
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With a 1.5 to 1 Reward Risk Ratio, the breakeven win rate is 40%.
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So in the fifth experiment let's see if compounding and adjusting after every trade will even
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work when the win rate is just above breakeven, something like 45%.
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With no compounding, the first account was only up by 140%, whereas the second account
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with compounding and adjustment after every trade was up by 350%.
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There is clearly a big difference.
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Till now, I have been compounding around 30% profit without making any adjustment to the
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position size when there is a loss.
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But after 5 experiments, we have enough data that says compounding and adjusting position
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size after every trade is not only better but adjusting position size when there is
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a loss significantly reduces the probability of blowing up the account.
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So I will change my compounding method as well.
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That's all!
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I hope you learned something.
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Get trade alerts, see how I take high probability trades by supporting Trading Rush on Patreon.
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Thanks for watching.