Another rookie question from yours truly, a three-parter after I just took the 2 dumbest losses in my very short trading career this week alone, I finally realize that I need a stop loss system that I just make ironclad and execute automatically. So for day trading, I'm wondering the following:
1) is there a golden percentage people tend to use to avoid getting stopped out on minor pull backs? My hunch is to go with 1% for awhile and see how that goes, but if there's a smarter % percentage, I'm open to suggestion.
2) Should the stop loss vary by stock price? With a 1% rule, a $20 stock could stop you out way more frequently than say a $50 or $100 stock.
3) On trailing stops, do you guys shrink them on the way up or keep them uniform? My rookie sense is the longer you've gone up the tighter you should make the stop.
Sorry, I know these are very elementary questions, but hopefully conceptually interesting to hear your thoughts. Thanks!
Ur stop should go behind some 'key level'. Usually a previous price pivot and/or market structure, which you are anticipating price to retrace into, and adjust your position size to match the amount u are willing to lose on each trade.
The fact is, that most of the time, all your stop loss does is stings you, and then reverses right back in your trade direction, or at least to break even. I had one last week in the EURUSD, where price didn't even run through my Stop Loss, but my cfd brokerage spreads widened just enough to take me out, before turning on a sixpence and ramping right back up the chart, rallying far higher than my wildest upside target might have been.,,and similar things happen in the DOW and the S&P, in both directions.
The problem is, the 1 times in 10, when your stop loss is triggered, and price keeps going and going and going. Just takes one of those to wipe out your account. So you unfortunately have to trade with a Stop Loss. Do try and deploy some kind of logic to wear you place it, but don't take it too seriously. It is just a way of limiting risk and Stop Losses are there to be run out.