darvas_trader
Junior member
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Suppose you invest a equal amount of money on randomly picked stocks all having comparable prices (like between 5-10$, say). You choose a particular time frame. You put a stop loss of 1% and take profit at 2% (or some number more realistic, ie most likely to be hit rather than most profitable, for your timeframe). My question is if you do this for thousands of trades would you more likely end up with a positive balance, given brokerage costs are low. If so then this could be used as a good example for newbies to show that the holy grail actually lies in recognizing money management as the MOST important component of trading.