Quote from nzbryant:
...Now I only use breakeven stops, and have all my profit unprotected. That is great for bearing and OVERCOMING FEAR, and makes YOU take responsibility for exits, and that makes YOU focus more on what the mkt is actually doing rather than using trailing stops as a crutch.
This is something I'm currently slowly integrating into my trading plan.
However, I must exit some contracts at the first profit target zone and leave the remainders at breakeven.
I got bills to pay and a family to support
I started realizing when I use trailing stops (profitable trailing stops if hit) I had not been watching price action the way I should have been watching it...
Instead, I became so fixated on my open position that I didn't have the ability to adapt/react to take advantage of new opportunites...
Not knowing that such (breakeven stops) allowed me to indirectly be more efficient in managing my open position.
Simply, trailing stops is counter productive to my trade methodology although it may not be for someone else with a different trade methodology.
Now if a trade signal appears while I still have an open position...
I either reverse my trade position or exit a bulk of my position (lock in profits) and keep a remaining open small position that still has the breakeven stop...
Then either dumping the remainders at the next opposite trade signal or ADDing to the profitable position if a continuation pattern appears.
Thus, in a way, I'm using trade signals that appear after my entry...using those trade signals as trailing stops or to signal to ADD to a profitable position.
Results so far: More profits and the ability to adapt/react when new opportunities appear...
Instead of freezing like deer at night in front of headlights while standing in the middle of the road while in an open position that has trailing stops.
The question now is when a new opportunity (trade signal) appears while I have an open position...
How do I know if I should either dump a bulk of my position to lock in profits or reverse the trade?
Currently, that's subjective and hopefully I'll have specific rules for determing such.
Right now...most of the time when I reverse a trade position its because the new trade signal has appeared on a
higher chart interval (still playing around with this).
Another option is to open a new trade position in a similar trading instrument.
Example I could be Long ER2 and later if I get a trade signal to reverse my ER2 position...
I could dump a bulk of my ER2 and leave the remainders at breakeven and then get Short in YM if YM is in a similar like price action.
NihabaAshi
"Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap, but by the seeds you plant."--Robert Louis Stevenson