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“Cut your losses short and let your profits run.” So many traders chant that mantra while working in the markets. Anyone who has ever had money in the markets knows that this is an easy thing to say but much harder to actually do. The emotions of fear and greed creep into our trading environment and influence our trading decisions. My students often ask me if there is a way for them to hold on longer to their trades for greater profits. Fortunately, there are some things we can do to help us to accomplish this.

The first is to have a trading plan that will detail your risk management and trade management strategies. This is such a critical tool to be a successful trader that we involve trade plan development into every one of Online Trading Academy’s courses. Having written rules for managing trades can help remove the effect of emotions on your trading since you will be following a prescribed strategy, basically following your orders, rather than trying to make decisions on the spot. Writing the rules down allows you to review them on a regular basis and see if you are consistently following them. You are holding yourself accountable for your actions and are more likely to follow them.

In your rules, you should have some sort of guideline as to when you will move your initial stop to break even. You could move it when the current profit is equal to the initial risk in the trade. The disadvantage of this method is that you can get stopped out too quickly from time to time. To avoid this, you could move the stop to break even once your profit is twice as much as the initial risk in the trade. Or perhaps you move your stop only after price has moved halfway to your first target in the trade.

Stocks

You can also choose to use rules for adjusting a trailing stop as you are profiting in the trade. This is not necessary for some traders as they let price either hit their target or stop out at break even. But if you want, you can create a mechanical trailing stop that objectively exits you from a trade that does not quite reach your target before reversing. One method I use is a moving average. I will exit a profitable trade only if price closes beyond a moving average. This is easy to observe and can also be programmed into most trading platforms to occur automatically. The one thing you may notice about all of the above suggestions is that they are all rule based. We need rule based strategies to become more objective in trading and not emotionally biased.

Another method to help you hold onto your positions and grow profits is to hide the P/L on your platform. In Tradestation, you can see the current profit or loss, (P/L) of your position in various places. When you are in a trade, you do not need to know how much you are making or losing. You should have planned the trade before entry and should already know the potential loss if your stop is hit or the potential profit if you make it to your target. How is watching the P/L change going to help you? It does nothing but increase the power of your emotions as you become greedy or fearful.

Stocks

Lastly, get paid for your effort. I trade impulses of the dominant trend. In our courses we teach you how to identify them. Impulses tend to pause but break through supply or demand on the lower time frames. Since that is the norm I will often target supply or demand from a larger time frame for my profit targets. This allows me to be able to take larger wins and greater profits. However, I am human and not immune to emotions like fear and greed. To lessen the impact of them on my trading, I will often plan to take profits at two or more targets and effectively scale out of a position. The first target will be the supply or demand from the time frame where I entered the trade, and the second will be from that larger time frame I mentioned. The larger time frame that I use is determined by a formula that I discuss in the XLT program.

Imagine that you walk into a casino and place $100 on a blackjack table. When you win your first hand, you take back your initial $100 and put it in your pocket. You are now playing with the winnings or what we call “house money.” Psychologically, you will be less emotionally connected to that house money than you are to the initial funds that came from your pocket. When you take partial profits at a smaller time frame target, you are more likely to be relaxed and allow the remainder of your position to run to the predetermined target. Already having been paid on the trade will allow you to mentally withstand the one or two candles that go against you or a small correction while you are in the trend on your way to your target.

So, the key to getting greater profits is to create rules that can make your trading more methodical rather than emotion based. To be a successful trader you need to be consistent. To build consistency you need a plan.

Learn to Trade Now

Neither Freedom Management Partners nor any of its personnel are registered broker-dealers or investment advisers. I will mention that I consider certain securities or positions to be good candidates for the types of strategies we are discussing or illustrating. Because I consider the securities or positions appropriate to the discussion or for illustration purposes does not mean that I am telling you to trade the strategies or securities. Keep in mind that we are not providing you with recommendations or personalized advice about your trading activities. The information we are providing is not tailored to any individual. Any mention of a particular security is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold that or any other security or a suggestion that it is suitable for any specific person. Keep in mind that all trading involves a risk of loss, and this will always be the situation, regardless of whether we are discussing strategies that are intended to limit risk. Also, Freedom Management Partners’ personnel are not subject to trading restrictions. I and others at Freedom Management Partners could have a position in a security or initiate a position in a security at any time.

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