One thing that is certain in anyone’s trading career is losses. Even the best traders lose from time to time. What the best traders have in common however, is that they are very professional losers. Knowing how to lose properly is a must in a long and prosperous trading career. This theme is also the back bone of the Online Trading Academy success. From the classroom to the Extended Learning Track, a main focus for us is showing traders how to reduce risk with three important tools. The first is the proper use of protective stop orders, the second is proper position size and the last, but maybe most important, tool is to keep losses small.

Protective Stop Orders

Protective stop orders to the trader are as important as the oxygen tank to the Astronaut in outer space.  Without them, and proper use of them, you’re in big trouble. Protective stop orders in trading are meant to help limit your potential loss. There is more than one type of protective stop order and it’s very important that you understand the difference between them.

Stop Market Orders: This is an order to buy or sell once price trades a particular price. Once price reaches a pre-defined price, the order becomes a market order. This type of order can be used to enter or exit positions. Typically, this order is used for protection. While execution of this order is typically guaranteed, the price at which the order is executed is not guaranteed. This is because the order being triggered is a market order. The benefit with this order is that if price surpasses your stop price, the market order will take you out of the position. The negative is that if the market is moving fast, you may see some slippage and not get filled at the price you desire. This certainly is the ideal order if your goal is to protect yourself. As a trader, I always use this order for protection.

Stop Limit Orders: This type of order combines the features of a stop order with the features of a limit order. Once a pre-defined stop price is reached, the stop limit order becomes a limit order to buy or sell at the limit price or better. The benefit of this order is that the trader has control over the price the order will execute at (it is “limited” to the stop price). The VERY negative factor with this order is that it does not in any way guarantee getting filled (protection) which is what most traders/investors want in a stop order. For example, if you bought a stock at $41.00 and have a sell stop limit at $40.50, and price reached $40.50 but there are no buyers, price will keep declining and your loss will grow with no protection. In short, if you are looking for more guaranteed protection, the stop market order is a much better choice. As a trader, I NEVER use this order for protection.

Where to place protective stop orders?

OTA Supply/Demand Grid: 12/2/16 NASDAQ Short

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This is a shorting opportunity we identified with our OTA supply/Demand Grid in the NASDAQ. The market opened and rallied right up to our pre-determined supply level where our students are instructed to sell short. To protect the short position if we are wrong, we use a “buy stop market” order. The initial protective buy stop order was placed just above the black supply line. The red line is exactly where the buy stop market order should be placed. We place the stop at that price because it is just above where all the sellers are according to the chart and our rule based strategy. We know this is where banks are because price could not go to that level, there was too much supply. This was our “initial” buy stop.

OTA Supply/Demand Grid: 12/29/16 NASDAQ Short

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The next chart is a different short trade in the NASDAQ. Many traders like to use a “trail stop”. A trail stop is simply the act of moving a buy stop down with price during a short position or moving a sell stop up with price during a long position. The benefit of a trail stop is to capture the majority of an intended move in price so as to not “give back” profits. While there are a number of different types of trail stops, I will focus on one of the more objective ways we handle trail stops at Online Trading Academy. As price is falling and we are in our short position, we want to bring our protective buy stop down as price falls to protect our profit. Where we move our stop to precisely depends on where any new supply levels develop. On the chart above, as price declines from the congestion area we can then move our “buy stop” order down to just above that new supply level as seen on the chart (New Buy Stop – Red Line). What we are doing is protecting our short position with this new supply level. If the market is weak, price should not rally above that supply and continue to decline, which is what we want for our short position. This, again, is one of the more objective ways we use real time supply and demand analysis to trail stop our positions.

Position Sizing

Position

Proper position sizing is another key component to managing risk properly. Here we have a demand level and then a decline in price to that level for a low risk buying opportunity. If we buy at the top of the demand zone and place our protective sell stop below the demand zone, we can do some simple math to ensure we are not going to lose more money than we are comfortable losing by using proper position size. In this example, let’s assume we have an account with $100,000.00 in it and we decide that our maximum risk is going to be 1% of the account ($1000.00). If this trading opportunity requires a $0.40 stop, when we do the math we see that we can buy 2,500 shares. This means that if the trade does not work out we will only lose the amount of money we are comfortable losing, the $1,000.00. Having a position sizing grid like the one you see here when trading any asset class also helps your trading become more mechanical. The key is that you don’t want to be “thinking” much when the markets are moving. You simply want to follow a logical rule based plan, based at its core on the laws of supply and demand.

Keeping Losses Small

The cornerstone of Online Trading Academy is risk management. Knowing how to minimize risk is the most important thing in trading. There are really only three possible outcomes to a trade or investment: A big win, a small win, a small loss, or a big loss. As long as we ELIMINATE the big loss, we can live very comfortably with the other three.

As humans, we always want to be right; we hate being wrong. You can’t think this way in the world of trading and investing because the truth is, you will have losses. Embrace those losses as a part of your profitable strategy and keep them small. I have losing trades sometimes but I really don’t care. On the emotion side of trading, I don’t feel any different about a winning trade or a losing trade. Perhaps the fact that I have been doing this so long is a factor but the reality is, I am simply executing a profitable plan over and over and over.

Hope this was helpful. Have a great day.

Learn to Trade Now


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Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to strong gains above 1.1850 on USD weakness

EUR/USD clings to strong gains above 1.1850 on USD weakness

EUR/USD preserves its bullish momentum to start the week and trades above 1.1850. The US Dollar struggles to find demand ahead of Wednesday's critical January employment report and helps the pair continue to push higher. 

USD/JPY slumps below 157.00 on intervention risks

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The Japanese Yen outperforms the US Dollar to start the week on the back of speculations that authorities will step in to stem JPY weakness in the domestic currency following Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's landslide win in Sunday's election.

Gold holds steady above $5,000

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Gold builds on the gains it posted to end the previous week and holds steady above $5,000 on Monday. Data released over the weekend showed that the People's Bank of China extended its Gold buying spree for a 15th month in January. Moreover, dovish US Fed expectations and concerns about the central bank's independence drag the US Dollar lower for the second straight day, providing an additional boost to the non-yielding yellow metal.

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Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

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