Quote from Buy1Sell2:
You'll quickly see that a person using their own individual optimal target of 6 points will do better by letting their full trade run to 6 points each time.
I think it's great that the OP has admitted that his earlier arguments were false. When the thread first started the OP was trying to claim that the optimal exit point could be
objectively determined. He was not saying it was
each individual's optimal exit point, he was saying that we could use things like ATR, vol and (bizarrely) backtesting to determine the
objectively defined, valid for all traders optimal exit point for any trade.
Now he has changed the story and is saying that each individual should use their own 'optimal exit point' as the place where they take the entire trade off.
He has now admitted that there is no 'optimal exit point' except the one that each trader feels is right for him. A huge step forward.
Now all he has to do is understand that for some trading systems (especially those that involve legging in) the optimal exit point will vary according to position size and the extent of the move, as well as other factors determined by the variables in the system.
Actually this is a welcome change in the story. Possibly, the claim that 'backtesting' could be used to determine the objectively defined optimal exit point for a trade was the thing that made the difference, since this is so obviously ridiculous.
Since there is no way to determine in advance what the markets will do, the agile trader will allow
price action to dictate his moves. Some traders use targets, some do not. For those that do, sometime they will let a full position ride to the target. Sometimes, price action will show them that markets have changed and it is advisable to take part of a position off the table. Sometimes, market action will dictate that the entire position should be taken off the table before either a stop loss or a profit target has been reached.
It is self-evident to anyone who has traded real money that theoretical constructs like 'optimal exit point', although fine in the academic world, don't have much use in the real world. There is no one set of rules that applies to all traders and all systems. To suggest otherwise is naive at best and dangerous for beginners at worst.