Quote from dwpeters:
And how many times was there a generally steady and sustained event that reversed as intended, to recover at least some of the loss and in some cases turn a profit? The problem is that once a trade goes against you, what's the best move from that point? I find that many trades that go against me, sometimes significantly, turned around for a much smaller loss or even profits. You can use stop losses to reduce your risk on a given trade, but I haven't found a way to use them to improve the risk adjusted return of my overall strategy. I wish I could and believe me I've tried. The rare but significant moves against me are quite painful. I take solace in knowing that testing shows my strategy as is to be superior to the alternatives I could identify and knowing that most traders would not be willing to sit through such moves.
We have also seen this for mean reversion systems. We have tested a large number of stop-loss schemes and failed to find one that improves profitability (expected return increase) in walk-forward testing.
This obviously does not mean that they can't be found. Moreover, a stop-loss will truncate your S/L distribution which may be helpful even if it does not improve the expected return. Or it can be used to avoid disasters (but this is more of an insurance, and as we know insurance cost money on average).
IMO, for mean-reversion systems the problem is inherent in the underlying assumption - you enter a trade when you move away from a mean assuming it will revert back towards the mean. If it moves further away from the mean it's hard to argue, under assumption of mean-reversion, that it will be less likely to start to move towards the mean.
Hugin