I agree but why does that exit have to be at a fixed price with a standing order? Why can't it be a manual, pre-determined exit "area" that is based on the behavior of the market once that exit point is reached? The failure to exit at that area is a break down in discipline, not a break down in methodology. And just so I'm perfectly clear, I don't use such a wide stop on all trades. It's a very specific trade. There is another specific trade where I use a stop as tight as 6 ticks, depending on the level of volatility. Back in 2008/09 the tightest stop I ever used was about 4 points. Anything closer would have guaranteed a good ass chewing. The volatility was so high it was suicide to keep them closer.
Quote from logic_man:
The only way to prove this empirically is to look at the results of traders who use stops and traders who don't use stops and compare their returns for statistical significance. This kind of blanket statement is useless. In simple terms, the only way what you are saying is true is if 85% of small traders who don't use stops lose and 95% of traders who do use them lose, making for the overall 90% losing population. That 10% difference in loss rates would show that not using stops adds value to the trader.
A trader who says he doesn't use stops reminds me of a guy jumping off a building who says he'll figure out his plan for landing on the way down. No, your plan for landing is already built in to the fact that you've jumped, whether you realize it or not.
Knowing where you are going to exit is part of sound planning. There is, for every trading entry type, a completely logical price at which the trade should be exited for a loss, if the trade doesn't become profitable, which can be deduced from the entry logic. If there isn't, your methodology is based on arbitrary subjective factors, not logic. And, yes, for some trading methodologies, that exit price can be 0, but 0 is still a stop. In many ways, 0 is a great stop, precisely because of its finality.
Tell me your entry and position-sizing logic and I'll tell you where your stop should be. Whether you actually enter the stop as an order beforehand is a tactical decision, not a strategic one.
