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If your stoploss is triggered.. I take it an order is placed in the queue for you. Obviously the sale isn't guaranteed at your price, because the price can fall before it reaches you.. how far do you chase the loss if everytime you change your order the price drops again? Do you ever reach a point where the loss hurts that bit too much, and you figure just to hang on to it? When does it become a panic sell just coz you're watching the price plummeting? Can you not then apply the theory that a fast fall in price like that is likely to rebound at some point?
Michael D
Set a conditional stop loss to trigger at 5.00. When it triggers, your instruction is to put the stock on the market AT LIMIT 4.90. Your order may or may not be filled.
2. When a conditional stop is triggered (eg CommSec), your order is placed in the market AT THE LIMIT YOU SET for the sell order. A big gap down can miss the price leaving your position open. You CANNOT use a conditional stop to put an order in AT MARKET.
eg. Set a conditional stop loss to trigger at 5.00. When it triggers, your instruction is to put the stock on the market AT LIMIT 4.90. Your order may or may not be filled.
4. Catching falling knives is not recommended if you wish to preserve your wealth. How far could ABS fall? How far could BNB fall? How far could MFT fall? "I never met a large loss that wasn't a small loss to begin with" - trading truism.
stargazer said:If not and you were not around and it went back up to 4.90 would it then be sold on the way through because it has touched 4.90.
Most has been covered here already, but some absolutes in regards to stops and trading;
1. If you do not know in advance exactly when you will exit a trade you must not enter it. The entry is easy, but the exit is where you make your money.
My question is if you set it up as you have indicated and say overnight there was bad news and the market opened down.
So the next morning this stock opens at say 4.60 what happens?
Is it sold or not?
If not and you were not around and it went back up to 4.90 would it then be sold on the way through because it has touched 4.90.
This aspect doesn't make sense to me, how can you set an exit point in a spec where news is unfolding before you....your exit point has to be dynamic depending on the news (I am not talking about a stop, I am talking about an exit point in profit...is that what you are referring to in point 1?
PS Doesn't even need to be a speccie...take BHP...economic conditions changed, commodity price rises you name it. I enter it at $45 today and need an exit point in mind? how about never?
Hmm.. yes, this is how I had understood it. Now I'm confused - is a conditional stop different to other stops?
So are you saying you just pull out where you can regardless? It kinda feels like you're joining in the panic selling
I've wondered that too. Does setting the condition as a falling sell make the difference? So if it rises to that price it won't trigger it? Altho, it wouldn't trigger until it reached the limit which was set at 5.00.
Argh.. I dunno! LOL.
I believe he was probably referring to an initial stop.
This aspect doesn't make sense to me, how can you set an exit point in a spec where news is unfolding before you....your exit point has to be dynamic depending on the news (I am not talking about a stop, I am talking about an exit point in profit...is that what you are referring to in point 1?
PS Doesn't even need to be a speccie...take BHP...economic conditions changed, commodity price rises you name it. I enter it at $45 today and need an exit point in mind? how about never?
You are talking about fundamentals (F/A) or otherwise known as investing.
We are talking about trading (T/A), you use resistance, support or simply trail it with ATR (average true range), time etc.
"I never met a large loss that wasn't a small loss to begin with"
Okay, I can certainly see the value of stop losses for a trader. I am not sold on stop losses for longer term investors in specs since there are often attempts to shake out a holding when a stock is on the way up. Sure if it goes sour after entry and in the negative it can be wise to exit and look elsewhere or wait for an uptrend but the thread title is "non negotiable"...from my perspective, they're certainly negotiable. Cheers.
Broadside said:This aspect doesn't make sense to me, how can you set an exit point in a spec where news is unfolding before you....your exit point has to be dynamic depending on the news (I am not talking about a stop, I am talking about an exit point in profit...is that what you are referring to in point 1?
PS Doesn't even need to be a speccie...take BHP...economic conditions changed, commodity price rises you name it. I enter it at $45 today and need an exit point in mind? how about never?
My question is if you set it up as you have indicated and say overnight there was bad news and the market opened down.
So the next morning this stock opens at say 4.60 what happens?
Is it sold or not?
If not and you were not around and it went back up to 4.90 would it then be sold on the way through because it has touched 4.90.
Cheers
SG
hmm... hypothetical. Still reading up on commsec's conditional orders..
If your stoploss is triggered.. I take it an order is placed in the queue for you. Obviously the sale isn't guaranteed at your price, because the price can fall before it reaches you.. how far do you chase the loss if everytime you change your order the price drops again? Do you ever reach a point where the loss hurts that bit too much, and you figure just to hang on to it? When does it become a panic sell just coz you're watching the price plummeting? Can you not then apply the theory that a fast fall in price like that is likely to rebound at some point?
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