Posted by stefano59 on 8th of Jun 2011 at 01:32 pm
I apologize if I missed it from the previous posts, but is there
a statistic about the % of winners for each of the 4 types of
trades? (% winners for trades that needed only 1 entry, % winners
for trades that needed 2 entries etc.)
Posted by stefano59 on 8th of Jun 2011 at 02:39 pm
But I dont want to know if the first entries were 90% winners or
second entries were 95% winners. I am interested about the % of
winners for trades that involved 1 entry, the% of
winners of trades that involved 2 entries and so on. do you
see the difference?
tumblers sheet shows the trades, and since he also has all the
data there you can easily just compute that yourself. He
shows Entry 2 (26 wins), Entry 3 (10 wins). I suggest combing
through the data and computing what you want, it's all there.
You can take the # of wins for each scale in against the
total and compute the %'s
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Statistics
Posted by stefano59 on 8th of Jun 2011 at 01:32 pm
I apologize if I missed it from the previous posts, but is there a statistic about the % of winners for each of the 4 types of trades? (% winners for trades that needed only 1 entry, % winners for trades that needed 2 entries etc.)
Thanks
Stefano, just scroll down about
Posted by philosoraptor on 8th of Jun 2011 at 02:15 pm
Stefano, just scroll down about eight posts!
But I dont want to
Posted by stefano59 on 8th of Jun 2011 at 02:39 pm
But I dont want to know if the first entries were 90% winners or second entries were 95% winners. I am interested about the % of winners for trades that involved 1 entry, the% of winners of trades that involved 2 entries and so on. do you see the difference?
http://breakpointtrades.com/blog/post/159874/ tumblers sheet shows the trades,
Posted by matt on 8th of Jun 2011 at 02:46 pm
http://breakpointtrades.com/blog/post/159874/
tumblers sheet shows the trades, and since he also has all the data there you can easily just compute that yourself. He shows Entry 2 (26 wins), Entry 3 (10 wins). I suggest combing through the data and computing what you want, it's all there. You can take the # of wins for each scale in against the total and compute the %'s