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Title: Message
dear
kimlarinc,
i
think it is the most critical information that you point
out.
i have
been reading sun tzu since i was 13. according to the golden rules the importnat
thing in the beginning is not winning, rather not losing.
i
think stoploss is not unique for every player. every strategy should be assigned
a stoploss accordingly.
setting a stoploss very narrow is as harmful as setting it very wide. it
should just fit. no more or less.
finally, "In most
cases, we'll set a stop to limit our potential loss to no more than
10%. "
it
seems like you either have very long term decisions or use a lot of leverage.
isn't 10% a little bit wide. please correct me if i am
wrong..
thanks.
Using a stop loss
virtually removes the human element from the emotional decision to sell a
stock or cover a short sale. You'll stop yourself before you destroy your
account. With most of your capital preserved, you'll return to invest
another day.
The stop loss is simply a sell order that is placed a
point or two or three below your buy price when you enter a stock
position. If the market goes against your stock and it declines to your
stop price, a market order is automatically triggered to promptly take
you out of the position. The theory is simple: Take a small loss today
rather a big loss tomorrow.
We suggest using a stop loss for nearly
every one of our plays. The placement of the stop can be quite specific,
i.e., placing the stop just below the point where the stock breaks out of
a strong chart pattern. Or it can be general, maybe a couple of points to
give the shares some "wiggle room" during periods of market volatility. In
most cases, we'll set a stop to limit our potential loss to no more
than 10%.
But a stop is for more than downside protection. It
should also be used to lock in profits when a trade is going your way. The
technique is using a "trailing" stop.
Say you bought shares in XYZ
at 20 and set your stop loss at 18. A week later XYZ is at 22. The savvy
investor will cancel his old stop and place a new one at 20. If the stock
sells off and hits 20, you'll be out of the position at break-even. If XYZ
continues to climb to, say, 24, you can put in a new stop at 22 and lock
in a two- point (10%) gain. In a rising market, you might be able to
"trail" the stop below an advancing stock for weeks or months, locking in
additional profits along the way.
(Note: For short sales—which
profit when the underlying stock falls-- the stop loss rule applies in
reverse. Set the stop loss a few points ABOVE the entry price and trail it
downward as the shares decline.)
If you work with a traditional
broker, he or she can set the stop loss when you make your purchase. Make
sure the broker places a firm order in the system and doesn't use a
"mental" stop like, "Get me out if it hits 60." That unverifiable type of
order got Martha Stewart into trouble.
If you use an online broker,
you can set your stop and adjust it electronically with a few mouse
clicks. You'll probably be asked to designate your stop as a "day order"
that expires at the end of the trading session, or "good `til cancel,"
which keeps the order in place until you remove it. Most brokerages allow
good `til cancel orders to expire after 30 days, so it is important to
monitor your account periodically to adjust your stops and make sure the
orders are still active.
A version of the stop order is the "stop
limit" order. In this case, a sale will occur only at the exact price you
determine instead of at the market.
This protects the investor in
case the stock "gaps down" at the open because of bad news, an earnings
disappointment, etc. If you set a traditional stop at, say, 18, and the
stock gaps down at the open to 16, a market order will be triggered and
the order will likely fill around 16. If a stop limit is in place,
however, there will not be a sale at 16 but only if the price drifts back
to 18. This sort of gap- down and bounce-back happens regularly, and a stop
limit can save a lot of money in these cases.
The downside to the
stop limit, though, is the possibility that the price won't recover.
Shares could gap down to 16, then drift to 15, 14 or lower before
stabilizing. In this situation, the stop limit is never triggered, and the
shareholder must make the agonizing decision to sell at a much lower price
than anticipated or hang onto the stock in hopes of a rally that may never
come.
For more nightly trading tips enter your email address
at:
http://clix.to/wallmann
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