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What Is A Trailing Stop Loss?

15/12/2009 by admin

What Is A Trailing Stop Loss?
A trailing stop loss is a useful tool for those doing momentum based stock trading. It may be easiest to explain with an example:
On Monday John purchases 100 shares of stock at 100 per share (that’s 10,000.) He then immediately places a 10% “trailing stop loss” sell order on those 100 shares of stock. From the point of purchase 10% is of course 10 which when subtracted from 100 gives you the initial stop loss point of 90. If the stock goes straight down after purchase the trailing stop loss would cause the stock to be automatically sold at 90 but in this case that is not what happened.
The stock reached a high of 105 on that first day and closed at 102. The trailing stop loss percentage is calculated by the highest market price the stock reaches. So if it has reached a peak of $105 then the new trailing stop loss is set to 10% short of 105 which is 94.50 (multiply the stop loss percentage by the high price and then subtract that result from the high price.)
On Tuesday the stock goes up to 113 before falling back as low as 109 and finishing at 111. The new trailing stop-loss is calculated with the 113 high water mark. It is 101.70 which is now higher than the price that John bought the stock for. In other words the 10% stop loss has now locked him into at least some sort of positive gain on this stock.
On Wednesday the stock drops down to 109 before rallying to a new high on the close at 116. Again a new higher stop-loss is set, it is now 104.40, this means that if the stock drops down to 104.40, it will be sold at market price at that time.
On Thursday the stock has a huge gain and goes straight up to 147. This sets the new trailing stop-loss at 132.30 which of course locks in John for a substantial gain from his original investment.
On Friday the stock sees has a correction and falls down to the stop-loss point of 132.30 triggering a sale of the stock. It is sold at the market price of 132 and John made a 32% gain on this trade (that’s 3,200.) The stock finished at 144, barely off it’s high from the day before.
So you can see from this example (as unrealistic as it may be) what some of the positives and negatives of using a trailing stop-loss may be. The positive is that it minimizes risk and locks in gains, the negative is that you may get bounced out by some normal market corrections on a stock that is still on an overall uptrend.
Setting the exact percentage trailing stop loss percentage should depend on the history of the stock’s price flucuation and how much risk you are willing to take.
My personal strategy calls for a tight trailing stop loss in general because I believe in cutting losses fast and moving on to another stock that has momentum.
It’s important not to become too emotionally attached to your stocks or to think that it “has to go back up.” You must realize that it (the stock) doesn’t have to go back up, it may never go back up! Or it may take YEARS before it reaches the price you bought it at again

A trailing stop loss is a useful tool for those doing momentum based stock trading.A stop loss is an order to automatically sell a stock when it drops a certain percentage. For example: you but a stock at $100 per share and put a 7% stop loss on it; the shares will sell automatically if the stock goes to $93 or below. It is an order that executes when price fall to/below your set stop loss price. when it executes it turns into market order. so you may not sell your stock at the price you specific, it may be lower.

Stop loss is a limit which is kept by traders to ensure that they do not suffer too much loss. Say I want to buy a stock trading at 50 Rs with a target of Rs. 70 there is a possibility that the stock will go down as well so to protect my investment I will keep a stop loss of say Rs. 40 if the price goes to this stop loss I will sell the stock and bear the loss of Rs 10 . This stop loss is arrived at by a lot of studying of technicals and charts and looking at market movement there is a big chance that when a stock comes to its stop loss price it could go further down.Stop Loss is a barrier to prevent loss in value of share bought.Shares bought at Rs.100/- with a stop loss of Rs.90/- when entered by a broker the moment the value goes down to Rs.90/- the trigger is activated thus preventing further down value in the scrip.This is mostly undertaken for futures & options trading transactions.

STOP LOSS IN BUY.—-if you want to buy something for example a stock is trading at 20rs and you have plan to buy at lower than 20rs…but in case of uptrend your max. purchase will be 21rs…so ur stop loss will be 21….

STOP LOSS IN SELL–—if you want to sell a stock at 100 and it’s trading at 99….but in case of fall your max. loss is at 98 so you put in 98rs..

The positive is that it minimizes risk and locks in gains, the negative is that you may get bounced out by some normal market corrections on a stock that is still on an overall uptrend.Setting the exact percentage trailing stop loss percentage should depend on the history of the stock’s price flucuation and how much risk you are willing to take.

It’s important not to become too emotionally attached to your stocks or to think that it “has to go back up.” You must realize that it (the stock) doesn’t have to go back up, it may never go back up! Or it may take YEARS before it reaches the price you bought it at again

Filed Under: General Tagged With: fitures and options, put option, short, stock, STOCK MARKET, STOCKS, stop loss, stop loss in stock market, stop order

Comments

  1. Trailing stop newbie says

    17/06/2010 at 7:18 pm

    Great article, can you tell me – is there any drawbacks in trailing stop trading?

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