Greetings Snake,It's Snake Pliskin said:Hi Bobby,
How are you going of late?
In forex a signal to sell can be treated as a signal to go short or vice versa.
Applying this to CFD'S would be just as practical.
Of course going short when one has wanted to go long is not always an option. There could be better long oppotunities elsewhere after stopping out.
Hows this:
Paper trade the direction you DON'T want to go and when it fails take a trade in the opposite direction. It is like a validating filter of such.
Have fun.
Snake :bounce:
interesting point bobby. its a question that has been debated on the SPI forum as well. In my experience, and ive only done it twice because it was a mistake, but I have put a position on, taken profits, and then gone the other way when i forgot to take my stop off. On both occasions when i realised my error, i made more money than the original trade!!Bobby said:Anyone use stops to reverse trade ?
E.G. Your long a 1000 X** shares at $20.00 , you set a stop at $19.00 to sell 2000 so you are now on the new direction with a 1000 X** shares short .
Bob .
Q: Why should you use a stop?
A1: Because you'll make more money more consistently by using a stop than by not.
A2: Because you'll preserve your capital whilst you're learning how to trade.
Q: But I traded XYZ and was stopped out only to see it go sky high afterwards!
A: Stops do that sometimes. However, stops also protect you from a stock which keeps going down. The protective effect on your capital outweighs the whipsaw effect many times over. You can always re-enter a rebounding stock. You can't exit a stock in freefall in hindsight.
Q: What's the best stop?
A: There is no perfect stop, just as there is no perfect entry. A stop which is too close to the price action will take profits quickly, but will suffer from frequent whipsawing. A stop which is too far away from the price action will give back too much profit before exiting a trade.
Q: Aw c'mon, what's the best stop?
A: Your stop strategy determines your trading frequency. Are you a long term trend follower? Use a wide stop. Are you a trader who wants to hold for days/a few weeks? Use a tight stop. As a hint for new traders, your best chance at surviving is to learn to trade longer time frames first, and then consider shortening your average holding time.
Is there interest in continuing this?
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