In the past I tried trading using fixed stops and many times I went through a painful series of small stops, infamously known in trading circles as death by a thousand stops, particularly when price is chopping, something traders using averaging down would be immune too.
They say your trading method should be one that you are ok with it psychologically. Personally, I'm not ok with getting stopped over and over again, I rather improve my position as volatility presents opportunity and then decide where and how to close it. If you notice when you get stopped, you not just accepting defeat but you are closing at unfavorable areas.
I definitely do not advocate averaging down into infinity, I think the emergency stop should be something related to past monthly performance. A trader must live to trade another day/week/month so preservation of capital must be part of the money management plan, even if averaging down.
I think one of the least talked aspects of trading is that when we take a stop we are taking it at the worst possible area, when it's totally against us and inconvenient for our pockets.
It is possible to realize one is wrong but wait for the right time to close it, even if it's still a losing trade, at least at places where it is less inconvenient.
I would like to reach out to other traders that favor averaging down and manage their stops based on price movement and not fixed areas and perhaps share ideas and concepts.
[to be continued]
They say your trading method should be one that you are ok with it psychologically. Personally, I'm not ok with getting stopped over and over again, I rather improve my position as volatility presents opportunity and then decide where and how to close it. If you notice when you get stopped, you not just accepting defeat but you are closing at unfavorable areas.
I definitely do not advocate averaging down into infinity, I think the emergency stop should be something related to past monthly performance. A trader must live to trade another day/week/month so preservation of capital must be part of the money management plan, even if averaging down.
I think one of the least talked aspects of trading is that when we take a stop we are taking it at the worst possible area, when it's totally against us and inconvenient for our pockets.
It is possible to realize one is wrong but wait for the right time to close it, even if it's still a losing trade, at least at places where it is less inconvenient.
I would like to reach out to other traders that favor averaging down and manage their stops based on price movement and not fixed areas and perhaps share ideas and concepts.
[to be continued]