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This is why traders fail IMO.Realist said:Trading is an art, not a science.
kennas said:This is why traders fail IMO.
When subjectivity comes into it, it is bound for the dog heap.
Unfortunately, I am still subjective about investing.........The sooner I leave emotion at the door, the better outcomes I will have. As in life.
Yes, that is why you are not a trader. It is also why I am predominatley an investor also.Realist said:Well mate, if it is a science what is the answer then?
What stop loss percentage should one use for all of their trades?
My answer is "it depends, it is subjective, use your brain, think!!"
What is your answer?
Hi Reece,reece55 said:Kennas
Whilst I believe the majority of traders fail, there are some that make a good living from it. There will always be a portion of subjectivity when it comes to interpreting a particular chart in the anticipation of a particular move. Rather than say traders fail, I believe most lose significant capital because they do not concentrate efforts on minimizing loses - IMO, the most important attribute a trader/investor can learn is when to call it quits - I always have a stop on each trade I enter and stick to it religiously. Then, with every setup, I look for a risk/reward ratio of 1:3, meaning that to break even I am only looking for 1 in about 2.8 trades to pay off to break even (the .2 is transaction costs). To me, there is no in between here - establish your stop loss and if it is hit, get out then. The market is brutal to those who display fear.
Cheers
Reece
tech/a said:Reece a long string of losses would mean that your R/R would decrease from longterm stats---as a long string of wins would increase your achieved R/R for your method of trading. How have you determined your 1:3.
In otherwords how do you know its enough?
It appears that this is a figure you have set rather than a figure derived from testing which shows an R/R based on X trades over X periods.
Point I'm making is that R/R aren't things you can arbitrarily set,they are a perfomance figure derived from multiple trading figures. To simply set an R/R value to trade by wont/cant guarantee success. They are a consequence of trading---they come after the horse not before it.
tech/a said:[
Point I'm making is that R/R arent things you can aribiterily set,they are a perfomance figure derived from multiple trading figures. To simply set an R/R value to trade by wont/cant guarentee success. They are a consequence of trading---they come after the horse not before it.
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