" A wise man told me that, no matter what you trade, the secret to success in the market is simply good risk management. Cut losses short, wait out the winners. "
he's right about the first part. as for the second part... not necessarily.
"Is 0.20 an ideal stop loss? No, not if your target movement, or the probable movement, is 0.10. If the target were say 0.5, then 0.2 could be acceptable, however it depends on many different variables when it comes to where a stop should be placed"
what matters is positive expectancy. stop (and targets) are SETUP dependant. if one is swing trading equities, using certain styles, it is absolutely correct to cut losers short and let winners run. however...
this is not necessarily the best way to trade. it is dependant on character of market (you are trading), trading style, timeframe, etc.
for example.
one setup i use has a stop of 11 pts, a first target of 6 points (then move stop to entry) and a 2nd target of 9 points. the tertiary target is market internals dependant.
this does not fit the above meme (cut losers short bla bla bla) in that the stop level is larger than the target. in fact, it's the complete opposite.
however, with this specific setup (and many others) i can be assured of over 82% winning trades, and a nice positive expectancy EVEN THOUGH my initial stop is WIDER than my initial target.
why?
because with THAT setup, that is the proper stop distance.
so, one of my first rules is that many people will try to take narrow rulesets and think they apply across the board to all trading styles, modalities, markets, timeframe, etc.
that is absurd but constantly repeated.
he's right about the first part. as for the second part... not necessarily.
"Is 0.20 an ideal stop loss? No, not if your target movement, or the probable movement, is 0.10. If the target were say 0.5, then 0.2 could be acceptable, however it depends on many different variables when it comes to where a stop should be placed"
what matters is positive expectancy. stop (and targets) are SETUP dependant. if one is swing trading equities, using certain styles, it is absolutely correct to cut losers short and let winners run. however...
this is not necessarily the best way to trade. it is dependant on character of market (you are trading), trading style, timeframe, etc.
for example.
one setup i use has a stop of 11 pts, a first target of 6 points (then move stop to entry) and a 2nd target of 9 points. the tertiary target is market internals dependant.
this does not fit the above meme (cut losers short bla bla bla) in that the stop level is larger than the target. in fact, it's the complete opposite.
however, with this specific setup (and many others) i can be assured of over 82% winning trades, and a nice positive expectancy EVEN THOUGH my initial stop is WIDER than my initial target.
why?
because with THAT setup, that is the proper stop distance.
so, one of my first rules is that many people will try to take narrow rulesets and think they apply across the board to all trading styles, modalities, markets, timeframe, etc.
that is absurd but constantly repeated.