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Trading expectancy and use it in trading

Sep 20, 2021 06:04

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Developing the trading plan is the biggest steps in successful trading journey. Your plan acts as a map that covers all of the reasons why and how you trade. This includes the evidence you’ll look for before entering a trade when you’ll exit trades, risk-management precautions you’ll take, such as how much money you’re willing to risk on each trade, and so on. People who are contemplating trading, or who are even trading at the moment, and who are not familiar with the concept of trading expectancy, is to make it their priority to fully understand its meaning and importance to successfully trading.

Trading expectancy is an idea that is least understood by the majority of people who are planning to and who are actually in trading. In this article we pointed the information about What is trading expectancy and How you can use it in trading?

Trading Expectancy

The expectancy in trading is that on average, we can expect to see how much money we can make or lose for every dollar we risk. Trading expectancy is a calculation that gives what the profit is for each trade – how many trades are won with the average loss in the lost trade and the average gain in the winning trade. The key question is whether traders have an average positive effect when dividing total profits by total trades.

Over 90% of traders are trading with a negative expectancy. They are deceived into thinking that they are going to turn it around or make a run, but the truth is that they are trading a method with a negative expectancy and even if they do go on a lucky run, the end result (long term) will be unprofitable. The good news is that expectancy can be manipulated and even reversed, you just have to change certain things about the way you trade and, as a result, your expectancy can begin to recover.

Expectancy is one of the most important aspects of any trading strategy and it can be positive or negative, known as positive expectancy or negative expectancy, respectively. When experimenting with the ‘expectancy formula’, traders quickly come to realize that no single set of numbers gives a positive expectancy, but there are an infinite number of sets therefore (in theory) there exists an infinite number of trading systems that could be profitable. The expectancy model is suggesting that even random systems can be profitable if the money management is sound. The expectancy model can also impact on another trading belief; it is possible to develop systems using expectancy and position size as the underpinning foundations where the stop loss is larger than the profit target.

Now let’s see how to calculate business expectancy and expectancy ratio.

A trading expectancy is an average amount you can expect to win (or lose) per trade with your system when a large number of trades are taken (at least 30 to be statistically significant). In order to calculate expectancy, you need 4 things – your win percentage, your average win, your average loss, and your loss percentage. The expectancy formula as follows.

Here’s how to calculate trade expectancy, then we’ll look at some scenarios.

(Win % x Average Win Size) – (Loss % x Average Loss Size)

Input the percentages as a decimal. For example, 80% is 0.8.

Consider Richard Dennis and the Turtles. Their system often won less than 30% of time, some of the Turtles even won less than 15% of the time, but the strategy still made them money. That’s because their wins were so much bigger than their losers. There is a big difference between winning and profiting.

Let’s assume someone using a similar strategy only wins 20% of the time, but they make $1000 when they win and they lose $100 when they lose.

(0.2 x $1000) – (0.8 x $100) = $200 – $80 = $120

The number is positive, which shows the strategy has a positive expectancy. It is making money. But what does the $120 mean? The expectancy is the average return for each trade, including wins and losses. This trader is expected to win 2 out of 10 trades, resulting in $2000 in gains. They are also expected to lose 8 trades out of 10, resulting in losses of $800. Subtracting the $800 dollars in losses from the $2000 gained, the trader is left with a gain of $1200 over 10 trades. How much did they make on average per trade? $1200 divided by 10 is $120. Therefore, trading expectancy is what we expect to make on each trade, based on our win rate and average gains and losses.

A classic trader mistake is to take small profits hoping to win all the time, but then letting the losing trades get out of hand. Consider a trader who wins 70% of the time, making $150 on average when they win but losing $400 on losing trades.

(0.7 x $150) – (0.3 x $400) = $105 – $120 = -$15

For every trade this trader places they can expect, on average, that $15 will drain from their account. Over 10 trades they can expect to lose $150. With a negative expectancy, the more trades taken the more money that is lost. This trader may win often, but they aren’t profitable.

How can this trader become more profitable? Probably the easiest fix is to try to reduce the size of the losses, potentially with a stop loss order. If this trader can reduce losses to say $200, they will be profitable, even though the wins are only $150. This is because this trader is winning more than they are losing.

(0.7 x $150) – (0.3 x $200) = $105 – $60= $45

By reducing the size of losses, this trader can now expect to make $45, on average, every time they make a trade.

The trader could also refine their method so they are making more on winning trades. This could also swing the strategy into profitable territory. Since the win rate is already quite high at 70%, it will be hard to improve on that. Therefore, effort is best spent on reducing the size of losses or increasing the size of winners.

If your win rate is below 50%, your wins must be larger than your losses in order to produce an overall profit. The lower the win rate, the larger those wins need to be relative to the losses.

If your win rate is above 50%, your wins can be bigger or smaller than your losses. Bigger wins than losses is ideal. The higher the win rate, the larger the losses can be relative to the win size.

In all cases, risk must be controlled. Ideally, keep risk to less than 2% of trading capital.

Over expectancy in trading

Trade expectancy really matters when there is many trades. While 10 trades were used in the examples above to keep it simple, 10 trades means nothing. It is a statistical blip. To get a reasonably trade expectancy, look at results over 50 trades, or preferably 100 or more. Over that many trades we start to get a truer sense of how a strategy performs. Over time, things change. Market conditions change and we change. That means that our trade expectancy may change over time. That is okay. Changes in our trade expectancy gives us important information we can use to keep our trading on track.

If we were profitable, but are becoming less so, market conditions may have changed or maybe we have become sloppy in implementing the strategy. In either case, we need to correct our behavior, adjust our strategy, or simply step away from the market until conditions become more favorable. If our trade expectancy is improving, consider why. Did you change something? Inquiring may produce insights that continue to propel you forward.

Money Management and Risk

You have to take a risk if you want to trade and apply money management. Your return would be exact of what you take the risk.  After understanding the expectancy rates the next big decision you should be taking is position sizing. That’s the reason why some investors are happy with their ten or fifteen percent a year returns, while some traders prefer making millions from their twenty to thirty thousand. In the end, you should trade as per your preferences and choose the position of your trade as per the risk you are willing to take.

Conclusion

Nevertheless, expectancy is a good benchmark to evaluate a trading strategy. You could also think of expectancy as how much you can theoretically expect to get paid for each trade you take over time.

As we all know, it’s impossible to always be right when trading forex. However, figuring out your expectancy helps shift focus away from being right per trade to instead how right you are overall.

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