DislikedAny trader who makes a profit regularly is a real trader. Some do it using stop loss, others do it without it, sweeping generalizations cannot cover them all, I think.Ignored
Do you use stoploss? 648 replies
What stoploss do you use? 27 replies
forex tip - Don't use a fixed stoploss brokers can target 23 replies
Personal Take Profit and Stoploss (per human, not per trade) 0 replies
DislikedAny trader who makes a profit regularly is a real trader. Some do it using stop loss, others do it without it, sweeping generalizations cannot cover them all, I think.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Who actually real trader it’s difficult to answer, profitable trader or others, everyone has to ensure stop loss technique for avoiding unfortunate losses and risk particularly when trade with a large amount.Ignored
DislikedTrue. I, personally, prefer using stop loss. Sometimes the market develops too fast to react manually.Ignored
Dislikedhi guys, I've heard that pro fx traders who do not use stop losses and this had contributed much controvesy. Anyone who approve or disapprove please commentIgnored
Disliked{quote} custos, i always thought of you as quant trader, very smart and our views are sometimes similar. so i do want you to open your mind to somethings that might be beneficial to you. there are many types of styles of trading. for example, most traders, look at their charts, news, so forth, what have you. what ever you method is to help you decide direction of the currency. then you place an order, you put a stop loss at a reasonable level hopefully away from volatility and if you are right. you take profit if you are wrong you dont lose to much...Ignored
DislikedStop loss is a major technique to reduce unfortunate risk and losses but it is more appropriate to know how to use this trading technique exactly , most of time we use SL at random with no analysis , as a result it not works completely. need to practice a long time in demo to use Stop loss accurately.Ignored
DislikedHi, A related question, but not about stops, per se. Say I buy at 100, and it goes down to 95, then I close at 101 for a profit. Or... I sell at 100 and it rises to 106 before it drops for a profit. What is it called when the trade goes against you but you did not close it? Is there a name for this metric, long and short? In other words both trades look good, but maybe not really. Maybe the long trade dropped to 70 before it went into the black. There has to be a name for these numbers, I hope. Thank you.Ignored