Quote from OldTrader:
Just offering an opinion. This market has been a traders dream. But let's face it: the ES is a $50K contract. A 1 point loss is .1%. To think this is reasonable or practical is a pipedream. A 2 point gain isn't much better. Trying to achieve either of these is WAY too rigid, and therefore causes missing the important action that takes place.
Perhaps it depends on your method. Some of us are very successful targeting 2-3pts in ES using. (My personal profit target and stops are a function of volatility.)
Also you need to consider two major factors:
1. You must consider what time frame is involved. 2.00pts on ES on 1m charts is quite reasonable profit target and/or stop-loss (assuming your method has an edge trading 1m charts). However, 2.00pts on a 30m chart is probably noise.
2. You are looking at absolute % which leads you to the wrong conclusion. You need to look at volatility instead. For example, on 5m charts the ATR(24) of ES is 2.07pts. I think 1x ATR as a stop-loss or profit target is reasonable for certain short-term trading methods.
Now let's compare some stocks that I trade, and notice how 1x ATR(24) results in a very wide array of absolute %:
AMGN at 44.60, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.21 (0.47%)
YHOO at 15.82, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.08 (0.51%)
ORCL at  9.64, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.05 (0.52%)
XLNX at 19.59, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.13 (0.66%)
LLTC at 28.53, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.19 (0.67%)
VRTS at 16.45, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.12 (0.73%)
AMAT at 15.88, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.12 (0.76%)
NVDA at 11.40, 2-hour ATR on 5m bars = 0.15 (1.32%)
So my point is that rather than say short-term ES traders targeting 2pts is foolish because it is "only .2%" on absolute % terms, you should instead look at volatility measurements. If I was using an absolute % rule to determine what stops and/or profit targets were valid, I would be way off the mark.