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Added for You - Trading Systems - What's the Deal With Hypothetical Results?
Structuring a Site in 60 Seconds Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal?Structuring a website is one big challenge that a site developer faces. It generally requires creativity combined with technical skills, which is by the way, a rare talent that one can possess. Realistically, a web developer should be able to capture the imagination of the one who is requesting for a site to be developed and fuse that w All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every serio Does Your Advertising and Marketing Talk to Your Customer? If you have been looking into trading systems, then you realized that most published results are marked as hypothetical.
This fact might have made you a bit skeptical. Does it mean that the system won't work in real time?It is paramount that your advertising and marketing in your company that you put out into the public talks to the customer. So often, small business brochures and advertising talks about the company and not about what is in it for the customer. You may have a great company and you may be very proud of this fact. But your customer cares The answer is no. Published results should always be marked as hypothetical, even if they have been achieved in "real" trading. Here's why: - It is impossible to predict the slippage when using stop or market orders. Two traders, let's say YOU and John, place an order at the same time, and John might experience 1 tick slippage, while you are filled right on your specified entry price. - You don't know whether a limit order will be filled or not. If your trading system requires the use of limit orders, you might experience the following situation: Your order is filled, John's isn't, and the market retraces. While you took some profits using a limit order, John is still in the trade and sees his profits shrinking, and in the worst case turning into a loss. - Another factor is the account size: If John is trading a rather small account, then his broker might liquidate his position because he experiences an intra-day drawdown that issues a margin call. Many electronic platforms are set up in such a way that they immediately liquidate a position, even if the market turns around and he would end the trade with a profit. John then experiences a loss, while you might realize profits on the same trade. - What about the ability to withstand losses and your discipline to follow the trading strategy no matter what? Let's say that after a couple of losses John decides not to follow the system any longer, and that's exactly when the system produces some winners. You strictly followed the system and realized these profits, while John is missing them. - Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal? All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every seriou Will My Credit Score Go Down If I Request My Own Credit Report? o traders, let's say YOU and John, place an order at the same time, and John might experience 1 tick slippage, while you are filled right on your specified entry price.Q: I have heard that credit inquiries can hurt your credit score. If I get my own credit report, will that affect my score?A: As a consumer, you have the right by law to receive a copy of your own credit report once a year for free. You can find this free copy at annualcreditreport.com. This will not count as a credit inquiry and w - You don't know whether a limit order will be filled or not. If your trading system requires the use of limit orders, you might experience the following situation: Your order is filled, John's isn't, and the market retraces. While you took some profits using a limit order, John is still in the trade and sees his profits shrinking, and in the worst case turning into a loss. - Another factor is the account size: If John is trading a rather small account, then his broker might liquidate his position because he experiences an intra-day drawdown that issues a margin call. Many electronic platforms are set up in such a way that they immediately liquidate a position, even if the market turns around and he would end the trade with a profit. John then experiences a loss, while you might realize profits on the same trade. - What about the ability to withstand losses and your discipline to follow the trading strategy no matter what? Let's say that after a couple of losses John decides not to follow the system any longer, and that's exactly when the system produces some winners. You strictly followed the system and realized these profits, while John is missing them. - Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal? All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every serio When Fresh Isn't Better s still in the trade and sees his profits shrinking, and in the worst case turning into a loss.We all pay more for the “fresh” label when we shop. And we expect higher quality when we do. But is “fresh” always the best way to go when you are looking for MLM leads to grow your business? Dozens of lead brokers want you to think so. In fact, they believe that if they jack up the cost per lead (by as much as 2000%), that you, the bu - Another factor is the account size: If John is trading a rather small account, then his broker might liquidate his position because he experiences an intra-day drawdown that issues a margin call. Many electronic platforms are set up in such a way that they immediately liquidate a position, even if the market turns around and he would end the trade with a profit. John then experiences a loss, while you might realize profits on the same trade. - What about the ability to withstand losses and your discipline to follow the trading strategy no matter what? Let's say that after a couple of losses John decides not to follow the system any longer, and that's exactly when the system produces some winners. You strictly followed the system and realized these profits, while John is missing them. - Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal? All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every serio Grab Their Interest with a Snappy Sound Byte th a profit. John then experiences a loss, while you might realize profits on the same trade.When you were working and someone asked you what did you had a ready answer. “I work at Acme Enterprises as a customer service manager.” It might not have been the most exciting introduction but it did provide you with an identity and a ready answer.Now that you are not working do you find your mouth full of cotton when you are net - What about the ability to withstand losses and your discipline to follow the trading strategy no matter what? Let's say that after a couple of losses John decides not to follow the system any longer, and that's exactly when the system produces some winners. You strictly followed the system and realized these profits, while John is missing them. - Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal? All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every serio Successful Projects: It's Not Rocket Science Published results are always PAST results. If more traders would have been trading the system, the prices might have behaved differently. There could be a difference in price movement when 100 traders try to enter the market at a certain price point instead of only 1 trader. And what if 1000 traders placed a 2-lot order at a certain entry signal?There is no worse person to be than the project manager at the end of a failed project. As an IT project manager, I have experienced that feeling and I can tell you it's not nice. IT projects are particularly difficult to manage. In fact there really aren't any IT projects, just projects that have elements of IT in them.The trouble All these factors cannot be fully accounted for when publishing the results. That's why every serious vendor should mark his results as being hypothetical. Back to your question: "Does this mean that the system won't work in real time?" No. It just means that you should be aware of the limitations of past performance results. No serious vendor can guarantee that a trading system will make profits in the future, but professional development and thorough testing of a system increase your chances of making money dramatically. .
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