Two weeks in the next branch there is a discussion of the use of stop loss, maybe you will be interested.
One of the Best Weapons in TradingBy the way, I use both stop loss and stop profit. The latter principle is the same, with the only exception that you take part or all of the profit, thereby minimizing the risk of loss of profit.
Cool I checked out the link.
Can someone explain to me exactly how limits work in stop loss orders. I was a bit confused by the guy explaining stuff in that thread.
Specifically, I'm using Coinbase Pro. When you go to stop order there's the coin amount, the stop price, and the limit price.
So from what I understand the Stop Price is what triggers your stop order. But I'm confused is the stop limit price supposed to be above or below the stop price.
For instance, let's say I'm trying to protect my trades from a crash so I want to do a stop loss sell. If I bought Bitcoin for $7000, and I wanna limit losses by selling if it hits $6600. So I put my stop price at $6600. From what I understand that will just trigger my stop order to then make a market order once the limit price is hit. So does my limit order need to be higher than my stop price (meaning the price would have to go up after hitting my stop price in order for my sell order to get hit)? Or can I put the limit price also at $6600 so it'll just trigger the market order right there. Can I put my limit order anywhere - above, equal to, or below my stop price?
Basically, is the way it work that once the stop price is hit, Coinbase will make a market sell order (or buy order if I'm buying) wherever I put my limit price at, doesn't matter if its the same, below, or above the stop price? So like if I thought dropping to $6600 meant the price was gonna crash, but I thought it'd have a dead cat bounce before crashing more, I could put my limit order at $6650. Or if I just wanted to sell at $6600 I would put both stop price and limit order at $6600? And I guess the lower limit order would be more used for buying in the opposite scenario to my first scenario here, if there is a pump but I think at some point it will correct a little bit, I could put a stop limit at $7500 as I think that is a clear indicator that the price will keep rising, but I think it'll definitely correct to $7400 before pumping further so I put my limit order at $7400?
Am I understanding how stop orders work correctly?