I've said it for years, position sizing matters in a high probability system. Much more so than you would believe and today's show is the first in a new mini-series we are doing leading up to the launch of our new backtesting software. Inside we'll cover a case study using and iron condor backtest we ran on TLT including the impact on returns that altering the position size had on the portfolio.
Key Points From Today's Show:
Weekly Iron Condor in TLT
- Set the trade up to make weekly entries every 40 days, averaging 40 days to expiration.
 - There may be some weeks that have no entries, and rarely any overlap between trades.
 - Overall allocation in the first run was at 50%, which really impacts the profitability of the trade.
 - There was no IV rank filter, and we just made as many trades as we could.
 - Took profits at 50%, and there was no stop loss or adjustments.
 - Selling the 20 delta calls on the short side, and the 20 delta puts on the short side, creating an expected 60% win rate.
 
Results:
- This iron condor lost compared to the S&P 500.
 - It had a negative 67% return over the testing period.
 - The number one reason why this trade lost was because of over allocation.
 - Taking profits early, and IV's over expectation, we still won at 81%.
 - The killer is the drawdown that was associated with high levels of allocation.
 - The sequence of returns created an impossible situation to recover from.
 
*Much more important to have slow, steady gains in your portfolio as opposed to big swings and big movements in your account.
Tweaks and Adjustments:
- Reset the strategy and adjusted the overall allocation from 50% to 30%.
 - Used the same exact setup - 40 days to expiration, no IV rank, taking profits at 50%, no stop loss, etc.
 - Just entered fewer trades for the portfolio size -- instead of doing five tickers, do three.
 
Results:
- Went from a negative 67% return to a 6.86% return.
 - The max drawdown was reduced to 45%, which happened in the middle of the cycle.
 - This shows how important small tweaks in allocation can be, as well as the importance of not having large drawdowns early on in your portfolio.
 - When your sequence of returns are not correct and you are over-allocated, so you lose early big, which sets you up for disaster.
 

