If you consistently have moves around +/- 10pips - then identify if your trading goals are these kind of fast profits - which it seems is not the case, or if you are operating with too much leverage - so that your stops are way too tight or you get too squeamish about the trade going negative.
I usually operate with roughly 1/3 - 1/5 of the potential profit as a stop. But then I immediately start trailing the stop when it moves into the right direction, because I want to catch that particular movement. There can be minor fluctuations, and I need to take that into consideration as well.
I trail with 20-30 pips when going for over 100pips moves, but sometimes I know there will be stalling around some special levels, where a retracement will happen back after the move resides and I need to tighten the stop past such levels - or there can be some resistance/support levels and for scalps I stop there if significant delays are apparent.
Of course this means that I adapt actively to every trade, and do not set levels with great rigour. Sometimes I miss out on "the full potential" of the trade, but it keeps me pretty safe more than half of the times. I also don't let the trades go negative when I first have the movement that I want. Then I rather take a small profit and see if the opportunity is still there, and if I can get a better entry - simply re-evaluate.
If you have many smallish losses compared to your targets, then you need to reconsider your entry strategy/signalling or your leverage, since you seemingly bail out so close to your entry --- as well as consider how long your trades should take. By the number of trades you do per session - it seems like you are scalping. 8 trades in around 2 hours is much more than I normally do, unless I am on a roll and keep getting it right.
When your first trades were negative, then you need to figure out if you are able to read the markets properly - or if it was your entry that was bad. In other words, take some time in between trades to analyse - in stead of doing your analysis before you start trading. Then you are much closer to the market situation and it is easier to predict. But by the looks of it - you are scalping and overtrading - evident by your last and biggest loss where you "gutted it out" or wanted to win by all means to make up for your losses, but thereby incurring more than half of your daily loss on pure stubbornness.
If you do your analysis hours ahead of your trading, but then do all your trades with just minutes or seconds in between - then your analysis does not at all match your trading style or vice versa - and your analysis efforts are completely wasted. You need to understand the mathematical and philosophical nature of prediction...
I usually operate with roughly 1/3 - 1/5 of the potential profit as a stop. But then I immediately start trailing the stop when it moves into the right direction, because I want to catch that particular movement. There can be minor fluctuations, and I need to take that into consideration as well.
I trail with 20-30 pips when going for over 100pips moves, but sometimes I know there will be stalling around some special levels, where a retracement will happen back after the move resides and I need to tighten the stop past such levels - or there can be some resistance/support levels and for scalps I stop there if significant delays are apparent.
Of course this means that I adapt actively to every trade, and do not set levels with great rigour. Sometimes I miss out on "the full potential" of the trade, but it keeps me pretty safe more than half of the times. I also don't let the trades go negative when I first have the movement that I want. Then I rather take a small profit and see if the opportunity is still there, and if I can get a better entry - simply re-evaluate.
If you have many smallish losses compared to your targets, then you need to reconsider your entry strategy/signalling or your leverage, since you seemingly bail out so close to your entry --- as well as consider how long your trades should take. By the number of trades you do per session - it seems like you are scalping. 8 trades in around 2 hours is much more than I normally do, unless I am on a roll and keep getting it right.
When your first trades were negative, then you need to figure out if you are able to read the markets properly - or if it was your entry that was bad. In other words, take some time in between trades to analyse - in stead of doing your analysis before you start trading. Then you are much closer to the market situation and it is easier to predict. But by the looks of it - you are scalping and overtrading - evident by your last and biggest loss where you "gutted it out" or wanted to win by all means to make up for your losses, but thereby incurring more than half of your daily loss on pure stubbornness.
If you do your analysis hours ahead of your trading, but then do all your trades with just minutes or seconds in between - then your analysis does not at all match your trading style or vice versa - and your analysis efforts are completely wasted. You need to understand the mathematical and philosophical nature of prediction...
