Super Fund Investing vs Short Term Trades
If you are having good results with your trading portfolio should you consider using the same techniques with your superannuation fund? What about calculating your stops? Do you do that differently with your super fund than you do with your trading fund?
Stuart: I appreciate where that person is coming from, but to me they are so different, two completely different aspects of investment trading. Probably the biggest difference between the two is the amount of money in both. I have a lot more money in my super fund than my day to day trading fund. The purpose of both those funds is so different.
My investment trading fund, as much as I don't want to, I could afford to lose it tomorrow. It wouldn't ruin me. The last thing I want to do is lose all the money in my super fund. I am so conservative and so defensive and thinking much longer term in my super fund than I am in my day to day trading fund. So completely different purposes and to me they require completely different approaches. The size of a trading fund does affect your whole approach to trading. Whilst all the same rules of effective trading apply, most notable nipping losses in the bud and letting your profits run; you have adapt the way in which you apply those rules for maximum benefits and profits.
You want your superfund to continue to grow so that when you are able to finally tap into it, all of the money will be there and you will be financially secure.
The question was asked about setting stops differently. We all have the same rules of cutting losses and letting profits run, but the way we apply those rules across the different trading styles is very different. So of course I use very different stops in my super fund, and one wouldn't work for the other.
What about the method of calculation for your super fund? Would you use the same one that you use for your CFD trading fund? The width would be different of course, but is the method the same?
Stuart: The same method, no. I use a volatility base for my super fund and a technical stop for my short term trading. Investment trading often calls for different methods to be profitable. We have to be able to adapt our trading style to match our individual circumstances. - 23159
Stuart: I appreciate where that person is coming from, but to me they are so different, two completely different aspects of investment trading. Probably the biggest difference between the two is the amount of money in both. I have a lot more money in my super fund than my day to day trading fund. The purpose of both those funds is so different.
My investment trading fund, as much as I don't want to, I could afford to lose it tomorrow. It wouldn't ruin me. The last thing I want to do is lose all the money in my super fund. I am so conservative and so defensive and thinking much longer term in my super fund than I am in my day to day trading fund. So completely different purposes and to me they require completely different approaches. The size of a trading fund does affect your whole approach to trading. Whilst all the same rules of effective trading apply, most notable nipping losses in the bud and letting your profits run; you have adapt the way in which you apply those rules for maximum benefits and profits.
You want your superfund to continue to grow so that when you are able to finally tap into it, all of the money will be there and you will be financially secure.
The question was asked about setting stops differently. We all have the same rules of cutting losses and letting profits run, but the way we apply those rules across the different trading styles is very different. So of course I use very different stops in my super fund, and one wouldn't work for the other.
What about the method of calculation for your super fund? Would you use the same one that you use for your CFD trading fund? The width would be different of course, but is the method the same?
Stuart: The same method, no. I use a volatility base for my super fund and a technical stop for my short term trading. Investment trading often calls for different methods to be profitable. We have to be able to adapt our trading style to match our individual circumstances. - 23159


0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home