Originally posted by torntech.com
High TA,
Thanks for your comments. Could you please elaborate on the reward:risk ration ("at least 2:1 preferably 3:1"). What does this mean, and how could it be applied in practice?
Thanks. /JT
Before I take a trade I assess 2 things: the stop price and possible upside resistance. Obviously I don't know how high a stock will go but I do know where I will exit if it goes against me.
Let's say you're looking at a 5-minute chart (my favorite) and there's a pivot low at 22.00, with a previous pivot high/resistance at 22.50. The current price is 22.10. I take the trade because my stop would be approx 10 cents below entry price with a possible upside target of 22.50. In other words I'm risking a dime to make a possible 50 cents hence 5:1. That's a simplified example but it shows risk-to-reward as being positive.
Now let's assume I wait until the price climbs to 22.35 before entering the trade. A logical technical stop would still have to be at 22.00 but now I'm facing possible upside resistance at 22.50. Here's I'm risking 35 cents to make a possible 15. This is a reward:risk of less than one. I'm risking more on the trade than I'll probably make before the srock runs into resistance.
That's it in a nutshell
