i don't like traditional initial stops

Quote from Corallus:

Gordon Gekko, earlier this year, when I was trading SPY instead of ES I did exactly what you described in your post. I would enter a position of, say, 600 shares and put in a .30c stop from entry. If the position moved in my favor I would let it ride and move my stop to breakeven after SPY had moved .30c in my favor. If it moved against me .15c, I would exit 300 shares and continue to hold the other 300. If SPY continued against me another 15c and the initial .30c stop was hit, then I would then exit the remaining 300 shares.

I liked this method. I found that reduced my losses on my stop-outs, but it also allowed for a position to become profitable or b.e. because 300 shares were still being held. Now, since I am trading ES in single lots, I cannot use this technique until I move up to 2 lots.


how about doing the opposite ( kinda)....Enter a position long 500 shares and when it is close to hitting your stop add another 500 and exit the entire position if it hits your stop.....

doing it the other way may shake 1/2 your position out of alot of winning trades....just my opinion
 
Quote from Gordon Gekko:

for the record, my fixed 2 point stop was just for an example. for those that suggested putting the stop under recent support, etc.... let's just say that also happens to be 2 points away. would you exit a portion at 1 point away?

Definitely not, because all you are doing in this case is locking in losses. You need to wait for the market to tell you that your position is wrong.
Picture the following scenario. You go long, with a stop just below recent support (for example) at 2 points away. The market trades back to 1.5 points against you, tests this (valid) support level and then trades higher in line with the reasons you put on the trade in the first place. Taking losses when the market has not yet told you that you are wrong makes absolutely no sense to me.

Quote from Gordon Gekko:

so my point is..however you determine your initial stop, fixed or not, does it make any sense to scale out as your position turns into a loser?

No. Don't forget, a stop is a device designed to get you out of positions that are wrong, not to lock in losses. Wait for the market to show its hand, and either tell you you are wrong (you stop gets hit), or you are right (the market starts moving in your direction).

Your initial question was about initial stops. I assume you also have (and, in my opinion, need) some form of trailing stop (although the word stop in this sense is a bit of a misnomer - it should be called a trailing profit-protection device- a TPPD!!) to protect your profits.
This is a whole 'nother discussion.
 
Quote from Gordon Gekko:
1) say you're trading ES, you get a long entry signal, and your initial stop is 2 points. most people just stop out completely at their stop when it gets hit. my question is: is there any benefit to, say, sell half your position if it goes against you 1 point? (and sell the other half of your position if it goes against you another 1 point)
Some traders swear by this and other similar management techniques, but the reality is you are really trading two distinct and separate methods. You need to test each method individually. The reason some traders love this technique is the psychology of minimizing risk.

This is similar to exiting partial position after small profit and moving stops to break-even in case there is a big gainer. This way you don't psychologically feel that you've "missed the move". But if you do serious analysis you'll realize that each method has its own set of expectation and risk profile.
 
Quote from wally_:

2 pts is not enough for any serious strategy except scalping where it is probably too much.
2 pts is plenty for many serious strategies that aren't momentum scalping.

Depends on your timeframe, among other things..
 
Quote from dottom:


2 pts is plenty for many serious strategies that aren't momentum scalping.

Depends on your timeframe, among other things..

Examples, please?

Never did well with anything smaller than 2.5 pts, prefer 3 pts at least, 4 pts just in case. 6pt stops don't bother me when hitting bigger runs. If you have stops that tight you end up with more trades if only because you are stopped out too often.
 
Quote from wally_:



2 pts is not enough for any serious strategy except scalping where it is probably too much. Some of my strategies use 6 pt stop-losses. Know what to expect from your strategy. It is the strategy that should tell you when to exit and not anything else. If the strategy does not tell you that, you just don't have the right strategy, IMHO.

wally_
wel isn't that a fine how do you do. If 2 pts isn't enough, well then just turn it around and take a 2 pt profit. I am so sick of people saying stops are too tight. If a 2 pt stop and a 6 point target is a loser, then the opposite, a 2 pt target and a 6 point stop has to be a winner. Well? Which is it?
 
There are two issues here. One is stop size. The other is whether scaling out is beneficial. They are interrelated, as can be seen from a max adverse excursion analysis.

Obviously you do not want your stop to be in the range of MAE's that typically come back to be winners. Similarly, you wouldn't want to scale back in that range. It may be that your MAE shows a dropoff in winners at some point and a more dramatic cutoff further out. It might make sense to scale back at the first break point and exit completely at the second.

Another factor is exit technique. I have generally found that wide stops that are seldom hit provide the best overall results, but that is in the context of trying to hold winners at least until the close. It doesn't make sense to risk 6 points if you are going to take 2 point profits regularly. I also think the common advice to use "natural" support and resistance for stop placement is nonsense. The floor makes a good living taking these levels out every day. Pay attention to them but don't put your stops where the floor can get at them.
 
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