I will agree with you. Forex is not like some stock which can go to zero or up to infinity if someone gets a bug up their ass.Quote from SimpleTrades:
Yes, but on larger time frames you need a much wider stop which is precisely what I am doing. You see my selection process is not quite as trivial as oldtime is arguing. I am attempting to make a trade that I expect may go against me in the short term but will move in my favor in the longer term. I won't go into all the details of my decision making, but I have a high degree of confidence with this choice given the nature of a major floating currency pair. They aren't like a stock which can move in one direction all the way down to zero.
With my day job, I don't have the luxury of being able to place trades during the day. I have to be able to make trades that I can comfortably walk away from and examine in the evening or next morning.
Quote from oldtime:
yes, when I first started trading forex, that's all I did, all day long, just take small losses. "Whoa, look at me, I'm a fulltime trader who gets stopped out! Not like those dumbass amateurs who just hang on."
after a while I learned just at the point I was getting stopped out is the time I should have been entering
why add pain to suffering?
it was bad enough I entered too early, and now I am going to compound that error by exiting when I should be entering?
the thing about those forex positions, they don't spoil and have to be thrown in the trash every night like the restaruant owner's fresh produce
but if it didn't sell today and nobody bought it, you sure as hell don't need to buy anymore tomorrow

Quote from atticus:
Why use Quest when you have an Oanda account?
the funny thing is, good timing is exactly what I try to do in my conservative account. Over there I have been long the S&P since 2006, and know someday I will need to get flat. Plus I am about 50% in bonds, what's a guy suppose to do there? And just to make things worse, I am sitting on a pile of cash, losing me money everyday.Quote from cornix:
Hmm... do you believe consistent good timing is impossible?