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đź’ˇ IDEAS Protect Your Profits

There is nothing worse than seeing one of your trades up by 40 pips one minute only to see it reverse shortly after and hit the stop loss 50 pips lower. This type of experience is unfortunately very common among traders in the notoriously volatile currency markets, but it’s not inevitable by any means – it’s simply a matter of how well you manage your money.

Money Management

The forex market is a fast-moving one, and gains can turn into losses in the blink of an eye. This means that you have to be extra-diligent when it comes to managing your money. One of the most effective strategies towards this end is to protect your profits, even if you only bank 20 pips at a time. Now 20 pips might not seem like a lot, but if you had 10 profitable trades in a row of this size, it would add up to an altogether more respectable 200 pips of profits. Although this may seem like a miserly strategy, it chimes with the goal of minimizing losses and making money as often as possible.

At the end of the day, it’s your money you’re risking. Even if you are prepared to write it off as “risk capital” – i.e. money that you are willing to lose – you need to view your position in relation to the market in adversarial terms – and as in any conflict, you need to look after yourself as the highest priority.

There are a couple of strategies that can be easily applied to your trades in order to prevent winners from turning into losers: using trailing stops, and trading more than one lot.

Trailing Your Stops

This takes a bit of effort, but it is one of the most effective methods for protecting profits. In order to use them to this end, you need to set a near-term profit target. For instance, if this target is 15 pips, then as soon as you are 15 pips in profits, move the stop to the break-even point. Then, if it moves lower and hits the stop, you haven’t lost any money. If it goes higher, you can move your stop up from break-even by a similar amount to lock in profits.

Trading In Lots

If you trade more than one lot, you can set more than one profit target. So, if you traded two lots, you could have one profit target at a conservative level, say around 15 to 20 pips above your entry price, and a second one much higher, at which point you would bank a much higher risk/reward ratio. Once the first target level is reached, you could move the stop to break-even in the manner we described in the previous paragraph.

There are no hard and fast rules for how to do this – and it might be that you need to use larger amounts to suit your trading style and the time-frames you are trading. A long-term trader might prefer a wider first target such as 100 pips, while short-term traders might be better off with a more modest 15-20 pip target. It’s not an exact science, but by introducing a profit-protection methodology to your trades, you can accumulate more winners than losers, and ultimately succeed over the longer term.
 
The importance of managing money effectively in the forex market, especially in the face of its volatility. The strategies mentioned, like using trailing stops and trading multiple lots, are crucial to protecting profits and minimizing losses. Trailing stops are especially helpful because they allow you to lock in profits as the market moves in your favor, while reducing risk if it turns against you. Trading in lots also adds flexibility, letting you balance conservative and more aggressive profit targets. Ultimately, the goal is to build consistent, smaller wins over time rather than chasing large, unpredictable profits. Money management is key for long-term success in forex.
 
I have 2 kinds of trades in stock - Stocks I buy to hold “forever” (like certain oil companies, household goods, banks, and transportation companies) and those I hold to trade - hoping for a big jump in price, and then selling at my “target” price.

Since you asked when to take profits, I will give you a simple answer - and this takes discipline - sell when you are making money on the stock. If it is going up slowly, and you are nervous, sell when the stock goes up 10, 20, or 30 per cent.

There is no hard an fast rule, as my crystal ball has repeatedly told me.

I trimmed my Apple stock and reinvested the profits when it hit about $450 a share. It then continues up and split 4 for 1. Do I kick myself? NO. I made money, took that profit, and diversified my portfolio. I also did not sell about 100 shares.

If a stock you bought is making money, but you are afraid of losses, set a “stop-loss” trigger to sell the stock if it falls certain amount, like 10% in a day.

When I buy a stock, I contemplate if it will last 50 years or is a “flash in the pan” stock. sometimes this can offset your tendency to wait “just a little longer” until it hits 2x, 3x, 4x your cost. There is no guarantee - it’s always good to sell at a profit, even if it is meager and below your expectations, because money and markets are not emotional - and certainly not listening to ME!

If timing the market is too stressful for you, I would suggest a bunch of dividend paying stocks and ETF’s that yield 5–8% (choose carefully!) would give you some real income and growth. And you can hold them a long time.
 

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