When life gives ya Lemons, baby, MaKe Lemonade.
Would you mind editing the Overnight Edition of the Magic 8-Ball?
I'll buy one, gauraaaaanteed!
Here it is. All negativity is right out!
It comes with a positive song, too!
When life gives ya Lemons, baby, MaKe Lemonade.
Would you mind editing the Overnight Edition of the Magic 8-Ball?
I'll buy one, gauraaaaanteed!
"
DOES ANYBODY HERE HAVE STOPS IN THEIR MUTUAL FUND OR ETF FUND? FOR CRYIN' OUT LOUD! "
Once you are in cash the P&L of the trade is certain.Stop losses are not a panacea from preventing or limiting risk. All you guarantee is that you're out of a position, but you still have uncertainty around what your total pnl will be on the trade.
Because of the way a stop loss order works. It submits a market order after a price at been touched. So instead of you thinking you will get out on a 2% drop, you end up with a much larger loss.Once you are in cash the P&L of the trade is certain.
The trade is over. How can it be uncertain?
But the trade is still over.Because of the way a stop loss order works. It submits a market order after a price at been touched. So instead of you thinking you will get out on a 2% drop, you end up with a much larger loss.
+ 1But the trade is still over.
I agree you don't know where your exit order will be filled and gaps can cause bigger losses than you planned.
It happens but not that often. Having a method of getting out of your losing trades is still the best risk control I have found.
I don't. I'm not trading odd lots using charts either.+ 1
longandshort doesn't sound like he does either.
Risk management needs to be consistent. If it can break (overnight gap, random volatility) then you can't rely on it. It may protect you for smaller moves, but will have significant tail risk events. I'm not saying not to use a stop loss, especially if you're trading 10-50k at a time, but there are lots of other strategies to improve risk that you may not be aware of.But the trade is still over.
I agree you don't know where your exit order will be filled and gaps can cause bigger losses than you planned.
It happens but not that often. Having a method of getting out of your losing trades is still the best risk control I have found.
Traders (most or otherwise) do what they do and neither you, me or anyone else knows with any certainty what most do.I don't. I'm not trading odd lots using charts either.
Most professionals will set "soft exits" where a position will be reduced/exited regardless of thesis, but that trade will typically be done through a different order type than a simple stop loss.