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Also, with some of the poses being stupidly closed and then immediately opened.
%-\
That's not the point. It is the dust beneath our feet.
The point is where the equity of such an algorithm goes as a whole.
Sash, the "same thing" will happen on every instrument. Each pair will first move away from the starting price, then back to it. And then it will move away again. It's a matter of time.
As soon as I gave -1 somewhere, somewhere on another pair I got that +1 for my equity.
As soon asI gave -2 somewhere else, I received +3 on another pair.
Crosses of more than 2 currencies are all very similar. And the main thing is that if you go in the right direction you are good, if not, you make a loss, not a big one, but a loss. If you give them to us with a profit, we obtain them with a minus spread. However, if we have a skew in the exchange rate between 1-2 pairs and 2/3, then 3/1 pairs have made a profit. But these moments are rare or not very profitable.
Any hedge reduces losses by reducing profits.
You don't know when to jump off the train to nowhere yet.
You said: when it's 65,000%
:))
@moskitman have you tried this on a demo yet?
Yes, but my toolkit is poor.
One code opens the pending orders, another closes everything, etc.
Profit is there. It cannot not be - the system itself tends to profit, just as long as the prices are walking.
:))
It brings tears to my eyes!
And if it turns out to be a grail. Then you'll be in for a real treat, won't you? You're an emotional man.)
I'm just a realist.
The very approach "to close and immediately open" (i.e. to give the spread to DC) puts an end to the strategy.
PS.
In the process of building a profitable strategy, the question of minimizing costs should take priority over the question of maximizing profits.
I'm just a realist.
The very approach of "close and open immediately" (i.e. giving the spread to the DC) puts an end to the strategy.
PS.
In the process of building a profitable strategy, the issue of cost minimisation should take priority over the issue of profit maximisation.
You won't.
Pairs that have been in the red and closed on stops will make a profit. (And then only the prices will go where they should).
In the process of building a profitable strategy, the question of minimising costs should take priority over the question of maximising profits.
That's where grandma says it all! It's the same in life, by the way.
I still give up the losing leverage no matter how hard I try. It's a matter of skill and further grinding to do it with more or fewer trades.
It's a question of skill and further polishing.
Well, well.