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Success rate is a lie

Precision is for surgeons. In the markets, and in life, precision is a trap.

Most people are paralyzed by the fear of being wrong. They want to be perfect before they start. They think a “good” record means a high success rate. They want the safety of the majority.

That mindset is a death sentence for your capital.

If you are obsessed with your “win rate,” you are playing a game of ego. You aren’t playing the game of math.

The Math of Greatness

Greatness is a numbers game. It is a brutal, high-volume, low-accuracy grind. The legends don’t win because they have a secret map to the truth. They win because they fail more than you do.

The data is clear:

  • Frank Sinatra: 1,200 songs recorded. Only 209 hits. That is a 17% success rate.
  • Babe Ruth: 8,399 attempts. Only 714 home runs. That is 8.5%.
  • Pablo Picasso: 150,000 pieces of work. Only 1,170 hits. That is a staggering 0.7%.

If Picasso were a modern fund manager, he would be fired in a month. A 0.7% “hit rate” looks like a disaster on a spreadsheet.

But Picasso didn’t care about the 148,830 pieces that didn’t change the world. He cared about the outliers. He understood that the math of greatness is skewed. You have to produce the junk to get to the genius.

The Accuracy Obsession

Most investors are trapped by the “Batting Average” fallacy. They want to be right 80% of the time. They look for the “sure thing.”

They think five losses in a row means the system is broken.

It isn’t.

If you are right 90% of the time but your 10% of losses wipe out your gains, you are a failure. If you are right 20% of the time but your winners are 50 times the size of your losses, you are a legend.

The market doesn’t pay you for being right. It pays you for being profitable. Those are two very different things.

The “experts” on TV sell you accuracy. They sell you the lie that they know what happens next. They are playing to your human desire for certainty.

Trend following plays to the math of reality.

Chasing the Outlier

In trend following, we don’t look for the “perfect” setup. We don’t try to guess which stock will be the next Picasso.

We take the signal. We enter.

Most of the time, the trend doesn’t develop. We take a small loss. We exit. We do it again.

We are Sinatra in the studio. Most of the tracks won’t be hits. That is the cost of doing business.

But when the trend catches? When we hit that 0.7% outlier? We don’t take a “quick profit.” We don’t cap our upside because we are afraid to lose what we’ve made.

We let the winner run.

The one massive trend pays for the hundred small cuts. You don’t need a high success rate when you have a massive slugging percentage.

The world rewards volume, not perfection

Those who win simply fail more times than everyone else. They have the discipline to stay in the game when the “hit rate” is low. They have the system to survive the 99% of attempts that don’t go anywhere.

If you are protecting your ego, you aren’t protecting your capital.

The lesson is simple. Stop trying to be right. Start trying to be in the game for the outliers.

The moment you accept that failure is the fuel for greatness, you stop being a victim of the market and start being a master of it.


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Trend Following is for beginners, students and pros in all countries. This is not day trading 5-minute bars, prediction or analyzing fundamentals–it’s Trend Following.