Bill Carson
Junior member
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I would like to have a risk/reward of 2:1 or better and that seems straight forward. However as soon as the trade starts to go into profit my risk/reward changes for the worse.
For example.
I have a trade with a 20 pip Stop and a 40 pip Target. Risk/reward is 2:1.
The trade goes well and goes to a 10 pip profit. I am now 30 pips from my target and 30 pips from my stop. I am now risking 30 pips to make 30 pips. Risk/reward 1:1
The trade continues to go well and I show a 35 pip profit. I'm now 55 pips from my stop and 5 pips from my target. Risk/reward is now 1:11. Terrible odds.
I don't like this scenario and am trying to work out a strategy. The options as I see it are:
A. Have a trailing stop. The problem there is if my initial stop is at a support level and I move the stop, especially in the early stages, I could get stopped out on an otherwise good trade.
B. Quit the trade if it gets to within a few pips of the target. This won't work because it would be the same as having a lower target in the first place.
What is the conventional wisdom on this one?
For example.
I have a trade with a 20 pip Stop and a 40 pip Target. Risk/reward is 2:1.
The trade goes well and goes to a 10 pip profit. I am now 30 pips from my target and 30 pips from my stop. I am now risking 30 pips to make 30 pips. Risk/reward 1:1
The trade continues to go well and I show a 35 pip profit. I'm now 55 pips from my stop and 5 pips from my target. Risk/reward is now 1:11. Terrible odds.
I don't like this scenario and am trying to work out a strategy. The options as I see it are:
A. Have a trailing stop. The problem there is if my initial stop is at a support level and I move the stop, especially in the early stages, I could get stopped out on an otherwise good trade.
B. Quit the trade if it gets to within a few pips of the target. This won't work because it would be the same as having a lower target in the first place.
What is the conventional wisdom on this one?