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Risk Management

Stop Loss Orders

A stop-loss is a pre-set exit price that automatically sells your position if the stock falls to that level. It removes emotion from losing trades and protects your capital from catastrophic losses.


Types of stop-loss

Hard stop: a market order triggers when price hits your level.
   Guaranteed exit but may fill worse in fast markets.
  Mental stop: you commit to exiting manually at a level.
   Requires discipline -- emotion often delays the sell.
  Trailing stop: stop moves up as price rises (e.g. 8% below peak).
   Locks in profits while letting winners run.

Where to place a stop

Below a key support level (recent swing low).
  Below a major moving average (MA50 for swing trades, MA200 for long-term).
  A fixed percentage below entry (7-10% is common for growth stocks).

Don't place a stop at round numbers ($100, $200) -- that's where everyone puts them; institutions often 'stop hunt' to that level before reversing.

The psychology of stops

Most losses that become catastrophic started as 'I'll wait for it to come back.'
A 50% loss requires a 100% gain to break even.
Set your stop when you enter -- not after the stock has moved against you.

✓ Quick Tips
  • If a stop gets hit, don't immediately re-enter -- let the trade prove itself.
  • Moving your stop further away to avoid being stopped out is almost always wrong.
  • Paper trading with stops builds the discipline to use them in real trades.
  • The best traders lose small and win big -- stops make that possible.

Related: Position SizingRisk/Reward RatioDiversification

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