Stop Loss and Take Profit: Essential Exit Strategies
Traders obsess over entries while ignoring exits. But where you get out—not in—determines your profitability. Master stop losses and take profits to transform your trading results.
- Stop losses protect capital by auto-exiting when thesis is wrong. Place at technical invalidation, not arbitrary %.
- Take profits lock in gains. Use fixed targets, scaled exits, or trailing stops based on your strategy.
- Thrive's journal tracks your exit behavior—are you cutting winners or letting losers run? Data reveals the truth.
Why Exit Strategy Matters More Than Entry
You can have a 70% win rate and still lose money. How? By letting your losers run and cutting your winners short. Entry gets you into a trade, but exit determines your profit or loss.
Consider: You enter 10 trades. 7 are winners but you exit early with $50 profit each ($350 total). 3 are losers but you "give them room" and lose $200 each ($600 total). Net result: -$250 despite 70% accuracy.
Now reverse it: same 10 trades, but you cut losers at $100 each ($300 total loss) and let winners run to $200 each ($1,400 total). Net result: +$1,100 with 70% win rate.
Same entries, same win rate—radically different outcomes based solely on exit strategy.
Where to Place Stop Losses
Your stop should be where your trade thesis is invalidated. Not where you "feel comfortable" or at some arbitrary percentage.
Stop Loss Placement: Right vs Wrong
❌ Wrong Placement
- • Arbitrary percentage ("I always use 2%")
- • Where it "feels comfortable"
- • Round numbers (exactly $50,000)
- • Too tight (stopped on normal noise)
- • No stop at all ("I'll watch it")
✓ Right Placement
- • Below/above technical invalidation level
- • Beyond recent swing points
- • With room for normal volatility
- • Where thesis is clearly wrong
- • Set before entry, not after
Your stop should answer: "Where is my trade thesis wrong?" not "How much can I afford to lose?"
The process: First identify the technical level that invalidates your thesis. Then calculate if the resulting risk is acceptable. If risking $500 to make $250, the trade isn't worth taking. Find a better entry or skip the trade.
Take Profit Strategies
There's no single "right" way to take profits. Different strategies suit different trading styles:
Fixed Target
Exit 100% at predetermined level (e.g., 2x risk)
Scaled Exit
Exit in portions (33% at 1R, 33% at 2R, 33% trail)
Trailing Stop
Stop moves up with price (fixed % or ATR-based)
Time-Based
Exit after X hours/days regardless of P&L
The key: Decide your exit strategy before entering the trade. When you're up money, greed clouds judgment. When you're down, fear takes over. Pre-planned exits remove emotion from the equation.
Understanding Risk/Reward
Risk/reward ratio compares what you're risking to what you could gain.It's fundamental to profitable trading.
| Risk/Reward | Win Rate to Break Even | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1 | 50% | Poor—barely worth trading |
| 1:2 | 33% | Acceptable minimum |
| 1:3 | 25% | Good—significant margin for error |
| 1:4+ | 20% | Excellent—can be wrong often and profit |
Never take trades with poor risk/reward. If your stop is $200 away and target is $100, you need 67% accuracy just to break even. Most traders can't sustain that.
Non-Negotiable Stop Loss Rules
Set stops before entry
Know your stop level before you click buy. If you can't define where you're wrong, you shouldn't trade.
Never widen stops
Moving stops to give losing trades "more room" is how small losses become account-killers.
Use actual stop orders
Mental stops require discipline most don't have. Actual orders execute automatically.
Accept getting stopped
Being stopped out is the system working. It means you defined your risk and honored it.
Move stops only in your favor
To breakeven after profit, or trailing up—never against your position.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a stop loss?
A stop loss is a pre-set order that automatically exits your position when price reaches a certain level against you. It limits your downside by closing the trade before losses grow larger. Without a stop loss, a single bad trade can wipe out weeks of gains or even your entire account.
What is a take profit?
A take profit is a pre-set order that automatically exits your position when price reaches your target. It locks in gains at your predetermined level so you don't give back profits by holding too long. Take profits remove the emotional decision of "should I sell now?" from the equation.
Where should I place my stop loss?
Place stops where your trade thesis is invalidated—not at an arbitrary percentage or where you "feel comfortable." If you're long above support, your stop should be below that support. If the level breaks, your thesis was wrong. Technical invalidation, not pain threshold, should determine stop placement.
What is a trailing stop?
A trailing stop moves up as price moves in your favor, locking in gains while giving the trade room to run. Example: if you set a trailing stop 5% below peak price, and price runs from $100 to $150, your stop moves from $95 to $142.50. You capture most of the move while protecting gains.
Should I move my stop loss?
Only move stops in one direction—in your favor. Never widen a stop to give a losing trade "more room." You can move stops to breakeven after achieving a certain profit, or trail stops to lock in gains. Moving stops against your position is one of the most destructive trading habits.
What risk/reward ratio should I target?
Target at least 1:2 risk/reward (risk $1 to make $2) for most trades. This means with only a 35% win rate, you break even. Better ratios (1:3, 1:4) give more margin for error. Never take trades where potential reward doesn't significantly exceed your risk.
Should I use mental stops or actual stop orders?
Use actual stop orders, especially as a beginner. Mental stops require discipline that most traders don't have—when price hits your level, it's hard to actually exit. Actual orders execute automatically, removing the emotional decision. Mental stops have their place for experienced traders worried about stop hunts.
How does Thrive help with exit planning?
Thrive's journal tracks your actual exit performance: Are you cutting winners early? Letting losers run? Moving stops? The data reveals your exit habits. The AI coach identifies patterns and suggests improvements specific to your behavior.