Placing stops and targets is an essential part of any trading strategy – it is how you limit risk and take profits in a disciplined fashion. While placing stops and targets is a broad topic, there are certain basic things that you need to think about before you ever execute a trade.

Let’s begin with stops. This is perhaps the most important topic, since this is the way that you prevent large losses. Disciplined traders should spend more time thinking about how to manage risk than capture awards, since a single large loss can wipe out a significant portion of their trading account.

Placing a stop can be a delicate balance. A stop should be placed at the price level where it becomes clear that the trading signal that triggered your trade is no longer valid. Many traders make the mistake of setting their stop too close to the purchase price, not because they are timid but because they want to trade a large position. Never set your stop based on your position – instead, set your stop based on the analysis you have made, and then decide what size of position you want to trade based on that. Otherwise, normal fluctuations may take you out of your position to early. Also, don’t exit your position manually before your stop kicks in because you are scared – only do this if there is clear price action that indicates your trade isn’t going to succeed.

Of course, the actual placement of your stop will depend on your particular trading strategy. For instance, if you are trading pin bars, place your stop 1 to 10 pips above the high of a bearish pin bar in a falling market and reverse the strategy in a rising market – put it just below the low of a bullish pin. Similarly, if you using trading ranges between a lower support level and upper resistance level, put your stop just outside the trading range boundary. Of course, there are as many stop position strategies as there are trading strategies, but the important thing is to use a logical position in each case.

Placing profit targets is often a difficult task, both technically and emotionally. The problem is that none of us want to exit a profitable position when we think that there is more money to be made. However, it is far better to take a reasonable profit rather than lose everything because you have overreached. Your profit target should take into account the amount of risk associated with the trade – if you can’t see your way to making that profit level with the current trading conditions, then you shouldn’t open the position in the first place.

Again, specific profit target positioning depends on the strategy that you are trading. However, the first thing to look at is where a reasonable profit is given the risk in the trade, and then to see out there any barriers such as resistance levels between the current price and that target level. If there are, then don’t execute the trade – don’t kid yourself into thinking that your trade will breakthrough levels and achieve profits if a completely logical look at market conditions says otherwise.


 


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Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD stays weak near 1.1850 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD stays weak near 1.1850 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD holds onto Friday’s losses near 1.1850 in the early European trading hours on Monday. The pair remains vulnerable to further downside as the US Dollar stays firm following President Donald Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair. The focus now shifts to the US ISM Manufacturing PMI data. 

GBP/USD drops below 1.3700 as markets mull a Fed under Warsh

GBP/USD drops below 1.3700 as markets mull a Fed under Warsh

GBP/USD stays under pressure below 1.3700 in the European morning on Monday. Traders weigh what a Federal Reserve under Kevin Warsh might look like, propping up the US Dollar at the expense of the Pound Sterling. The US ISM Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index report is next of note later on Monday. 

USD/JPY slips below 155.00, an upper descending channel pattern

USD/JPY slips below 155.00, an upper descending channel pattern

USD/JPY loses ground after three days of gains, trading around 154.90 during the European hours on Monday. On the daily chart, technical analysis indicates a potential bullish reversal as the pair is testing the upper boundary of the descending channel pattern.


Editors’ Picks

Gold: Correction extends ahead of US ISM PMI

Gold: Correction extends ahead of US ISM PMI

Gold price extends correction to fresh monthly lows near $4,400 in European trading on Monday, pressured by some profit-taking. The precious metal continues its downtrend after reaching historic highs last week as Kevin Warsh's nomination as the next Fed chair eases concerns over the US central bank’s independence, bolstering the US Dollar recovery. US ISM PMI Manufacturing PMI data is awaited. 

EUR/USD stays weak near 1.1850 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD stays weak near 1.1850 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD holds onto Friday’s losses near 1.1850 in the early European trading hours on Monday. The pair remains vulnerable to further downside as the US Dollar stays firm following President Donald Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair. The focus now shifts to the US ISM Manufacturing PMI data. 

GBP/USD drops below 1.3700 as markets mull a Fed under Warsh

GBP/USD drops below 1.3700 as markets mull a Fed under Warsh

GBP/USD stays under pressure below 1.3700 in the European morning on Monday. Traders weigh what a Federal Reserve under Kevin Warsh might look like, propping up the US Dollar at the expense of the Pound Sterling. The US ISM Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index report is next of note later on Monday. 

Cardano dips below $0.28 as bears eye October 2023 lows

Cardano dips below $0.28 as bears eye October 2023 lows

Cardano price trades in red, slipping below $0.28 at the time of writing on Monday, following a correction of more than 15% in the previous week. The broader crypto market remains under pressure, with Bitcoin slipping below $75,000 on Monday.

Warsh effect ripples through markets, central banks on deck this week

Warsh effect ripples through markets, central banks on deck this week

The first full month of the year is behind us, and, honestly, it has been rather more dramatic than most had anticipated when toasting the New Year. We wrapped up last week with US President Donald Trump announcing his Fed Chair pick. 

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