Lunch Break Investing

Investing ideas so easy you can do them on your lunch break!

Posts Tagged ‘trailing stop loss’

Trailing Loss Limit Percent vs Dollar

Trailing loss limit is a great option for people who can’t watch their stocks. The problem I have run into is which to choose, percent or a base dollar amount. I love percents when it come to profit, but is it really the best option for a loss?

Example:
You buy a stock at $10 with a trailing loss limit of 10%. The loss limit would be $1.

Let’s say the stock makes a move:
$12 – loss limit of $1.2 or $10.80 : Profit of $.80.
$15 – loss limit of $1.5 or $13.50 : Profit of $3.50.

Now let’s look at the dollar limit:
$10 with a trailing loss of $1.
$12 – loss limit of $1 or $11.00 : Profit of $1.
$15 – loss limit of $1 or $14.0 : Profit of $4.

The numbers are convincing. I can speak from experience that the percent can bite into your profits quicker than the dollar amount. The biggest drawback of the percent is that it gets bigger as your profits grow.

Good automation should never limit or sacrifice your capital and profits.

Happy trading!

Trailing Stop Loss

A trailing stop loss allows an investor to set a loss limit (dollar or percent) on their stock.  As the stock trends upwards the limit follows.  Example:  If you set a $1 trailing stop loss on a $5 stock and the stock drops to $4, it auto sells.  If the stock moves to $6,  the limit is $5.  This a nifty option that protects your capital without constant monitoring.

This is handy for you lunch break investors.  Say you go to lunch and have a nice burrito.  You find the dream stock that is going to make you millions.  You buy! Just in case, you set a stop loss at 8%.  Now this awesome stock grows and grows.  Then one day, bang!  It’s not a hot stock any more.  Your trailing stop loss kicks in and sells at 8% under the last “up” closing price.  Now you made millions without trying.  Or in some cases stopped your loses before you lost a bug chunk of change.

Use trailing stop loss to protect your capital and profits.