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$Nanofilm(MZH.SG$
Profit has been stopped
Profit has been stopped
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$Seatrium Ltd(5E2.SG$ $FTSE Singapore Straits Time Index(.STI.SG$ $AEM SGD(AWX.SG$ $Genting Sing(G13.SG$
Some friends may be curious about the different leverage I use for each entry signal I post:
Why do some stocks take profit and stop loss of 20%, while others only 5%, or even 3%? How exactly should the money be invested?
Here's my own position management method:
Many times, a trading strategy will have many trading opportunities at the same time, and investors with more experience will spread their funds among different trading opportunities, thereby reducing overall risk.
The safest approach is to make every trading opportunity the same risk: for example, you can use 1% of the total asset profit and loss risk as the standard for a single trade. Then it is possible to calculate the leverage ratio that should be invested. Here are two examples:
1. The profit and loss ratio of a trading opportunity is 1%, then 1% ÷ 1% = 100%, so the capital leverage ratio is 100%, which means that this trading opportunity requires 100% investment of total capital.
2. The profit and loss ratio of a trading opportunity is 20%, then 1% ÷ 20% = 5%, so the capital leverage ratio is 5%, which means that this trading opportunity requires an investment of 5% of the total capital.
The two examples may seem to have a huge difference in investment, but in reality, the risk is just as great. For things like...
Some friends may be curious about the different leverage I use for each entry signal I post:
Why do some stocks take profit and stop loss of 20%, while others only 5%, or even 3%? How exactly should the money be invested?
Here's my own position management method:
Many times, a trading strategy will have many trading opportunities at the same time, and investors with more experience will spread their funds among different trading opportunities, thereby reducing overall risk.
The safest approach is to make every trading opportunity the same risk: for example, you can use 1% of the total asset profit and loss risk as the standard for a single trade. Then it is possible to calculate the leverage ratio that should be invested. Here are two examples:
1. The profit and loss ratio of a trading opportunity is 1%, then 1% ÷ 1% = 100%, so the capital leverage ratio is 100%, which means that this trading opportunity requires 100% investment of total capital.
2. The profit and loss ratio of a trading opportunity is 20%, then 1% ÷ 20% = 5%, so the capital leverage ratio is 5%, which means that this trading opportunity requires an investment of 5% of the total capital.
The two examples may seem to have a huge difference in investment, but in reality, the risk is just as great. For things like...
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$Genting Sing(G13.SG$
Profit has been stopped
Profit has been stopped
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$SATS(S58.SG$
Profit has been stopped
Profit has been stopped
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$UOL(U14.SG$
The daily level take-profit target has been completed
Weekly level entry signals are about to appear this week
Please reduce capital leverage according to the take-profit and stop-loss margin of the strategy
The entrance signal will be released tonight
The daily level take-profit target has been completed
Weekly level entry signals are about to appear this week
Please reduce capital leverage according to the take-profit and stop-loss margin of the strategy
The entrance signal will be released tonight
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$Sembcorp Ind(U96.SG$ $Genting Sing(G13.SG$ $FTSE Singapore Straits Time Index(.STI.SG$
I had a feeling after chatting with a friend.
Share my views on long-term and short-term investments:
Everyone with long investment experience should have heard that long-term investments have a better return in the long run than short-term investments. The main reason for this statement is that the price trend appears to be more stable and less variable on a long-term chart than a short-term one. As a result, short-term investments seem more likely to lose money.
Actually, if you think of a short-term chart as a long-term chart after time is accelerated, you will find that apart from differences in leverage, the winning rate of all trading strategies is similar in the long and short cycle chart. Using the same trading strategy, you have more trading opportunities in the short term and higher leverage in the long term. In fact, the final yield is about the same.
The focus is on using the right and effective”trading strategies”。
Some friends will ask, why am I passionate about using short-term strategies? The reason is “compound interest.” To make it easier for novice friends to understand, here's an example:
Assuming that under the same trading strategy, the annual return on long-term investments is 12%, with an average monthly yield of 1%. Short-term investments have a yield of 1% per month and are carried out continuously for 12 months. As a result, the actual annual return on short-term investments is no longer 12%...
I had a feeling after chatting with a friend.
Share my views on long-term and short-term investments:
Everyone with long investment experience should have heard that long-term investments have a better return in the long run than short-term investments. The main reason for this statement is that the price trend appears to be more stable and less variable on a long-term chart than a short-term one. As a result, short-term investments seem more likely to lose money.
Actually, if you think of a short-term chart as a long-term chart after time is accelerated, you will find that apart from differences in leverage, the winning rate of all trading strategies is similar in the long and short cycle chart. Using the same trading strategy, you have more trading opportunities in the short term and higher leverage in the long term. In fact, the final yield is about the same.
The focus is on using the right and effective”trading strategies”。
Some friends will ask, why am I passionate about using short-term strategies? The reason is “compound interest.” To make it easier for novice friends to understand, here's an example:
Assuming that under the same trading strategy, the annual return on long-term investments is 12%, with an average monthly yield of 1%. Short-term investments have a yield of 1% per month and are carried out continuously for 12 months. As a result, the actual annual return on short-term investments is no longer 12%...
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