Academy โ€บ Risk Management โ€บ Stop Loss and Take Profit
4

Trailing Stop Loss

Risk Management Intermediate โฑ 5 min read
Risk Management
Why Risk Management Matters Why Risk Management is Everything
Portfolio Management Portfolio Management
๐Ÿ“ Take Subject Test
๐Ÿ“š Subject Overview
Risk Management
9 topics ยท 4 chapters
Protect your capital โ€” risk management is everything.
๐ŸŽ“ Back to Academy
๐Ÿ‘‹ Welcome, Trader!
Login to track your progress
๐Ÿ”‘ Login ๐Ÿ“ Register Free
Academy Progress
0/6 Passed
0%
๐Ÿ“Š Register to save your progress
๐ŸŒ TradeSmart Community
Share your analysis. Learn from others.
๐Ÿ”‘ Login / Register โœ๏ธ Write a Blog

Stay in Winners Longer

One of the hardest problems in trading is knowing when to exit a winning trade.

Exit too early โ€” you leave massive profits on the table.
Exit too late โ€” profits evaporate and you might even lose.

The trailing stop loss solves this problem elegantly โ€” it automatically moves your stop in the direction of your trade as price moves in your favor.

What is a Trailing Stop Loss?

A trailing stop loss is a dynamic stop that follows price as it moves in your favor โ€” but never moves backward.

Key rule:
Trailing stop moves UP when price moves up โ€” in a long trade.
Trailing stop NEVER moves down โ€” even if price pulls back.

This locks in profits progressively while keeping you in the trade as long as the trend continues.

How It Works โ€” Example

You buy Bitcoin at $80,000.
Initial trailing stop: $77,000 โ€” 3.75% below entry.

Bitcoin rises to $85,000.
Trailing stop moves to $82,000 โ€” maintaining $3,000 gap.

Bitcoin rises to $90,000.
Trailing stop moves to $87,000.

Bitcoin pulls back to $87,000.
Trailing stop triggers. Position closes at $87,000.
Profit: $7,000 per BTC. โœ…

You stayed in the trade through the entire rally โ€” and exited automatically when trend reversed.

Types of Trailing Stops

Fixed dollar trailing stop:
Stop follows price by a fixed dollar amount.
Simple and easy to understand.
Example: $3,000 trailing stop on Bitcoin.

Percentage trailing stop:
Stop follows price by a fixed percentage.
Example: 5% trailing stop โ€” always 5% below current price.
Adapts to different price levels automatically.

ATR trailing stop:
Stop follows price by a multiple of ATR.
Most sophisticated โ€” accounts for current volatility.
Example: 2x ATR below current price.
Wider stop in volatile periods. Tighter stop in calm periods.

Manual trailing stop:
You manually move stop below each significant low as trade progresses.
Most flexible โ€” but requires active management.
Move stop below each higher low in an uptrend.

When to Use Trailing Stops

Best situations:

Strong trending markets โ€” trailing stop keeps you in the trend until it ends.
After reaching first target โ€” trail remaining position for maximum profit.
When you cannot monitor the market continuously.

Worst situations:

Choppy sideways markets โ€” normal volatility triggers stop prematurely.
Very tight trailing stop in volatile asset โ€” same problem.

Setting Trailing Stop Distance

Too tight:
Normal price fluctuations trigger stop before trend ends.
Stopped out prematurely โ€” miss large portion of move.

Too wide:
Stop too far behind โ€” gives back too much profit when trend reverses.

Balance:
Base trailing distance on asset volatility and timeframe.
Bitcoin daily chart โ€” trailing stop 5-8% below price.
Bitcoin 4 hour chart โ€” trailing stop 2-4% below price.
Or use 2x ATR for automatic volatility adjustment.

Breakeven Stop โ€” The First Trail

The first move of any trailing stop should be to breakeven.

Once trade moves 1R in your favor โ€” move stop to entry price.

Now worst case is zero loss. The trade is free.

From breakeven โ€” continue trailing below each higher low as price advances.

Trailing Stop vs Fixed Take Profit

FeatureFixed Take ProfitTrailing Stop
CertaintyGuaranteed if reachedNot guaranteed
UpsideLimited to targetUnlimited
Best inRanging marketsTrending markets
EmotionEasy โ€” clear targetHarder โ€” uncertainty

Best approach:
Use fixed take profit for partial position at first target.
Use trailing stop on remaining position for maximum capture.

In the next topic we will study portfolio management โ€” how to manage multiple positions and protect your account at the macro level.

Scroll to Top