How to avoid stop loss hits ? (100% success rate)

unless it’s a pure arbitrage I don’t think you can do it on every trade. (Every trade being different than every day as a trade can live longer than a day).

even virtu and citadel have down days (not many). JPM, gs too and they have commissions and favorable bid/ask as tailwinds.

Interesting. Per trade basis I don't think it's possible unless you're doing something stupid like no stop loss or have insanely large risk/reward ratio.

But pushing for profitable day, every single day is still risky. Right now Im just trying to figure out what my risk of ruin probability is given the current stats. More months needed
 
Sorry for my delayed reply bro....
Thanks for trying the early trend strategy.

This is my exit strategy...
1. Have a bit more liberal stoploss more you experience your stoploss hits and immediately turns back and moves in your expected direction. (This only increases your confidence in early trend strategy)

2. My Target is when i see sudden-huge raise (profit) i will immediately exit, otherwise i will continue traveling with the trend. (Sudden-huge raise usually marks the end of trend)

When you become an experienced early trend trader you may even FORGET to place a stop. But that's OKAY. Who needs a stop when trading early trend?

This is pure confidence, NOT arrogance.

Please answer the question.

At what price level should my stop and target be in the example i gave you. Where would you place the stop on that trade?

You ask for charts and then give super vague answers that everyone could come up with.
 
Please answer the question.

At what price level should my stop and target be in the example i gave you. Where would you place the stop on that trade?

You ask for charts and then give super vague answers that everyone could come up with.

First of all there is no fixed answer for your question. People give various fixed answers which means there is no real fixed answer.

Why so?

Because the volatility of market is NOT fixed, it is constantly changing. My answer was in sync with volatility. Simple.

If you still prefer a fixed answer then you need to ask people who are trading on market similar to yours.
 
First of all there is no fixed answer for your question. People give various fixed answers which means there is no real fixed answer.

Why so?

Because the volatility of market is NOT fixed, it is constantly changing. My answer was in sync with volatility. Simple.

If you still prefer a fixed answer then you need to ask people who are trading on market like yours.

So basically this thread is about nothing but hot air :rolleyes:.
 
  • Like
Reactions: rb7
This thread is about avoiding stoploss hits. For other specific queries you need to find outside this thread.

You asked for charts to analyse, when provided with a chart you give an answer that even my 10 year old could come up with.

This thread is a waste of time, 8 pages of saying absolutely nothing useful.
 
First of all there is no fixed answer for your question. People give various fixed answers which means there is no real fixed answer.

Why so?

Because the volatility of market is NOT fixed, it is constantly changing. My answer was in sync with volatility. Simple.

If you still prefer a fixed answer then you need to ask people who are trading on market similar to yours.

You have no idea what volatility is going to be after i entered my trade.

That's why i initially said it's easy to tell what to do after the fact.

Clearly when you don't know what happened later on you have absolutely no clue. Everyone, including my 10 year old can say you should have exited here or there when he can see how the trade evolved.

Now that i given you an example in which you can't see what happened after the entry you have no clue.
 
Sorry for my delayed reply bro....
Thanks for trying the early trend strategy.

This is my exit strategy...
1. Have a bit more liberal stoploss more you experience your stoploss hits and immediately turns back and moves in your expected direction. (This only increases your confidence in early trend strategy)

2. My Target is when i see sudden-huge raise (profit) i will immediately exit, otherwise i will continue traveling with the trend. (Sudden-huge raise usually marks the end of trend)

When you become an experienced early trend trader you may even FORGET to place a stop. But that's OKAY. Who needs a stop when trading early trend?

This is pure confidence, NOT arrogance.

In order to achieve 100% win rate, you need market to 100% go your direction after your position entered.
For example, if you enter long at ES 4280, you need market to immediately go like 4280.25, 4280.50 , every time, not one time it goes like 4279.75.
This is impossible. The things you talk are in your imagination, never exist in reality.It is not outside box thinking, it is outside reality thinking.
 
You have no idea what volatility is going to be after i entered my trade.

That's why i initially said it's easy to tell what to do after the fact.

Clearly when you don't know what happened later on you have absolutely no clue. Everyone, including my 10 year old can say you should have exited here or there when he can see how the trade evolved.

Now that i given you an example in which you can't see what happened after the entry you have no clue.

Read what told in the thread...

"I am studying major Index (non currency) across the globe on how to avoid stop loss.

Please share screenshots of the major Index (non currency) that you are trading. I will analyse and give my study report on whether it is possible to avoid stop loss in your trades."
 
You have no idea what volatility is going to be after i entered my trade.

That's why i initially said it's easy to tell what to do after the fact.

Clearly when you don't know what happened later on you have absolutely no clue. Everyone, including my 10 year old can say you should have exited here or there when he can see how the trade evolved.

Now that i given you an example in which you can't see what happened after the entry you have no clue.

This post is an example of non-original non-outside the box thinking. You are a bully and a failed trader.
 
Back
Top