Quote from taboni:
Just curious why you would want a buy stop for instance to be triggered when ask price=stop price.
Personally I prefer my stops to be done when, on a buy stop for instance, bid price=stop price. In my 18 years of trading in FX, I have witnessed far too many instances where the market raced to a stop level and then backed off. I put alot of thought into where my stops should be placed and I want to make sure my technical points are truly broken in order to stop out a position, not just touch and retrace.
So it costs an extra 2 pips, for my money it is well worth it.
Also say spreads aren't 1 pip wide as after figures, etc as the interbank market goes a bit wider. Say the spread jumps to
5 pips, even for a second. Say you have a stop at 60 to buy and the market goes 52-54, then 55-60, then 52-54 again. You are executed under the ask=stop rules. No thanks. Correct me if I am wrong but this is how I see it.
To avoid all the confusion, let's look at an example:
Current Euro quote on IB is 1.2363 / 1.2364
If you place a buy stop at 1.2370, then this will be triggered when the bid price is >= 1.2370
If you place a sell stop at 1.2350, then this will be triggered when the ask price is <= 1.2350