TESTEA (Theo erica123)
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TESTEAThảo luận
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Sep 05, 2011 at 03:30
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Hi erica123,
that is a very interesting equity curve you've got there! Are you trading manually or is this an automated system?
Warm regards, Judd Briza.
that is a very interesting equity curve you've got there! Are you trading manually or is this an automated system?
Warm regards, Judd Briza.
Don't work hard, work smart.
Tham gia từ Jan 26, 2010
44bài viết
Sep 05, 2011 at 14:13
Tham gia từ Jan 26, 2010
44bài viết
a little of both! Lets see how long it lasts😄
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Sep 05, 2011 at 14:59
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Well good job is all I have to say! Happy trading!
Don't work hard, work smart.
Tham gia từ Aug 31, 2011
6bài viết
Tham gia từ Jan 26, 2010
44bài viết
Sep 06, 2011 at 10:58
Tham gia từ Jan 26, 2010
44bài viết
to be fair, the gains are not all that impressive - let me explain why.
myfxbook has 2 calculations, the gain and the absolute gain. The gain is calculated via INITIAL balance. So if you put in $100 into an account and trade for one day, and then put $5000 the next day, and continue to trade.
The way myfxbook will calculate gain will be based on the initial balance of $100 so if you make 1% on $5000, that is $50, but my fxbook will make that calculation as 50% because $50 is 50% of your initial $100 deposit. So you can make $50 for 10 days, and it myfxbook will calculate that gain as the account having grown by 500% even though we both know the actual gain on the account was really 10%.
A lot of marketers do that, and you should be aware of that. I am not trying to sell anything, so I don't mind letting you know about this somewhat little known fact. The absolute gain gives the value based on all deposits, but even that is not so accurate because if you make lots of deposits and withdrawals, it doesn't reflect properly. In order to evaluate a system, looking at % gain is a very small part of the overall picture.
Good luck and many pips to all!
myfxbook has 2 calculations, the gain and the absolute gain. The gain is calculated via INITIAL balance. So if you put in $100 into an account and trade for one day, and then put $5000 the next day, and continue to trade.
The way myfxbook will calculate gain will be based on the initial balance of $100 so if you make 1% on $5000, that is $50, but my fxbook will make that calculation as 50% because $50 is 50% of your initial $100 deposit. So you can make $50 for 10 days, and it myfxbook will calculate that gain as the account having grown by 500% even though we both know the actual gain on the account was really 10%.
A lot of marketers do that, and you should be aware of that. I am not trying to sell anything, so I don't mind letting you know about this somewhat little known fact. The absolute gain gives the value based on all deposits, but even that is not so accurate because if you make lots of deposits and withdrawals, it doesn't reflect properly. In order to evaluate a system, looking at % gain is a very small part of the overall picture.
Good luck and many pips to all!
Tham gia từ Aug 31, 2011
6bài viết
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Sep 06, 2011 at 16:18
Tham gia từ Jun 26, 2011
90bài viết
Actually Erica(assuming that's your name=), I believe MyFXBook recently made some changes to how those Gain% are calcuated. Now the 'main-gain'% is the TWR, which is the most accurate and correct way to judge how much you've earned, so to speak. That means that it's all your percentage gains combined, at any given time, so that the balance at the time of the win/loss isn't reflected in the total Gain%. The Abs.Gain% however is how much your deposit/s has grown, so that number tends to get screwed up when you make a lot of deposit/withdrawals. Of course nothing is really 'screwed up' if you understand the number...
So actually your result is rather impressive(in my book at least), when you adjust it for the drawdown(which is all that matters when it comes down to it). But it's good to be humble. You never 'win' anything when it comes to trading=)
Judd.
So actually your result is rather impressive(in my book at least), when you adjust it for the drawdown(which is all that matters when it comes down to it). But it's good to be humble. You never 'win' anything when it comes to trading=)
Judd.
erica123 posted:
to be fair, the gains are not all that impressive - let me explain why.
myfxbook has 2 calculations, the gain and the absolute gain. The gain is calculated via INITIAL balance. So if you put in $100 into an account and trade for one day, and then put $5000 the next day, and continue to trade.
The way myfxbook will calculate gain will be based on the initial balance of $100 so if you make 1% on $5000, that is $50, but my fxbook will make that calculation as 50% because $50 is 50% of your initial $100 deposit. So you can make $50 for 10 days, and it myfxbook will calculate that gain as the account having grown by 500% even though we both know the actual gain on the account was really 10%.
A lot of marketers do that, and you should be aware of that. I am not trying to sell anything, so I don't mind letting you know about this somewhat little known fact. The absolute gain gives the value based on all deposits, but even that is not so accurate because if you make lots of deposits and withdrawals, it doesn't reflect properly. In order to evaluate a system, looking at % gain is a very small part of the overall picture.
Good luck and many pips to all!
Don't work hard, work smart.
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