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Stop Loss Orders: Complete Guide

How to set and manage stop loss orders effectively

โฑ๏ธ 4 min min read

Stop Loss Orders: Complete Guide

The stop loss is your insurance policy in trading. It's the single most important risk management tool, yet many traders either don't use them or use them incorrectly.

What is a Stop Loss?

A stop loss is an order that automatically closes your position when price reaches a specified level, limiting your loss.

Example

Buy EUR/USD at 1.1000 Stop loss at 1.0980 Maximum loss: 20 pips

If price falls to 1.0980, position closes automatically. Your loss is capped at 20 pips.

Types of Stop Loss Orders

1. Hard Stop

Fixed price level sent to broker.

Advantages:

  • Guaranteed execution
  • No emotional decisions
  • Set and forget

Disadvantages:

  • Visible to broker
  • Can be "stop hunted"
  • No flexibility

2. Mental Stop

Price level you monitor but don't submit to broker.

Advantages:

  • No stop hunting
  • Flexibility to adjust

Disadvantages:

  • Requires discipline
  • Can be ignored emotionally
  • Risk of not closing fast enough

Recommendation: Use hard stops always. Mental stops fail 90% of the time.

3. Trailing Stop

Stop loss that moves with profit.

Example: Buy EUR/USD at 1.1000 Trailing stop: 30 pips

Price rises to 1.1050:

  • Stop moves to 1.1020

Price rises to 1.1100:

  • Stop moves to 1.1070

Result: Locks in profits while letting winners run.

Where to Place Stop Loss

Technical Levels

Support/Resistance: Place stop beyond recent swing low/high

Example:

  • Swing low: 1.0950
  • Stop loss: 1.0940 (10 pips buffer)

Moving Averages: Place stop below MA (for longs)

Example:

  • 50 EMA at 1.0980
  • Stop at 1.0970

Chart Patterns: Place stop beyond pattern boundary

Example:

  • Triangle breakout at 1.1000
  • Stop at 1.0970 (below triangle)

ATR-Based Stops

Use Average True Range for volatility-adjusted stops.

Formula: Stop distance = 1.5 ร— ATR(14)

Example:

  • EUR/USD ATR = 40 pips
  • Stop distance: 1.5 ร— 40 = 60 pips
  • Entry: 1.1000
  • Stop: 1.0940

Stop Loss Mistakes

โŒ No stop loss - "I'll watch the trade" โŒ Stop too tight - Gets hit by normal volatility โŒ Stop too wide - Risk is too large โŒ Moving stop away from price (adding to loss) โŒ Taking stop off when price approaches

Stop Loss Best Practices

1. Set Before Entry

Always know your exit before entering.

2. Risk 1-2% Max

Position size = (Account ร— Risk%) รท Stop pips

3. Give Trade Room

Stop should be beyond normal volatility.

Rule: Stop distance > 1ร— ATR

4. Never Move Stop Away

Only move stop toward profit (trailing), never away.

5. Use Stop + Limit

Combine stop loss with take profit for complete risk/reward.

Time-Based Stops

Exit if your trade thesis hasn't played out in expected time.

Example:

  • Expected move: 4 hours
  • After 8 hours: Exit even if no stop hit

Stop Loss for Different Styles

Scalping:

  • 5-10 pips
  • Tight stops, high frequency

Day Trading:

  • 10-30 pips
  • Based on intraday levels

Swing Trading:

  • 50-100 pips
  • Based on daily levels

Position Trading:

  • 100-300 pips
  • Based on weekly levels

Summary

  • Always use stop losses
  • Set before entering trade
  • Risk max 1-2% per trade
  • Give trades room to breathe
  • Never move stop away from entry
  • Use hard stops, not mental

Remember: Your stop loss is your friend. Protect your capital, and profits will follow.

FN Pulse Editorial Team

FN Pulse Editorial Team

Expert Trading Analysts

Our editorial team consists of experienced forex traders, financial analysts, and market researchers dedicated to providing accurate and actionable trading education.

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