Trading with very tight stops and maximum lots gave mixed results, in a rather strong trend.
2 comments:
Alessandro
said...
This is why I prefer to use H-lines or at least 6 pips stop. Some times using smaller stops save us some pips but in my case ( at least) I get more loosing trades. I think it depends on the entry strategy we use, is we enter on a breack of supp/resistance we should have a bigger stops because there are tons of false break. If we enter as soon a new swing low/high as formed we can have a smaller stop just above/below that swing. What you think?
the width of the stop is an unsolved problem for me. Our kind of trades are based on the very short time momentum, so if entry is correct, price should move directly in our direction and produce gain. In that case a stop of even 3-4 pips could do the job. If entry is wrong, even a 10 p stop isn't enough. On the other hand, my average win is more than 4p, it was 6,4 on March. So i prefer to have more small losses than fewer bigger ones. Anyway I am the only one who publish losses too, i have more than 35% losing trades. I don't believe the guys who claim a 95% success whith such a tight stop...
"When i trade at home, I often watch the sparrows in my garden. When I feed them bread, they take just a little piece at a time and fly away.They keep on flying back and forth, taking small bits of bread. You will never be able to shoot a sparrow, it is just too fast. That is the way I day trade". M. Weinstein.
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There is nothing to sell on this blog. No signals, no "systems" for sale. Just my trading plan and the recording of my trades on eur/usd and the fx euro future recently. And the books, the music, the films I like.
The Forexbird is a professional currency trader. He is also photographer and engineer, a maths and music addict and curious about everything.
Reading simultaneously two books on Technical Analysis, one good and one (very) bad. The good one is this, by Martin Pring . All you need to...
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2 comments:
This is why I prefer to use H-lines or at least 6 pips stop. Some times using smaller stops save us some pips but in my case ( at least) I get more loosing trades. I think it depends on the entry strategy we use, is we enter on a breack of supp/resistance we should have a bigger stops because there are tons of false break. If we enter as soon a new swing low/high as formed we can have a smaller stop just above/below that swing.
What you think?
the width of the stop is an unsolved problem for me. Our kind of trades are based on the very short time momentum, so if entry is correct, price should move directly in our direction and produce gain. In that case a stop of even 3-4 pips could do the job. If entry is wrong, even a 10 p stop isn't enough. On the other hand, my average win is more than 4p, it was 6,4 on March. So i prefer to have more small losses than fewer bigger ones. Anyway I am the only one who publish losses too, i have more than 35% losing trades. I don't believe the guys who claim a 95% success whith such a tight stop...
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