Orders & Risk Management
If you dont control risk, the market will do it for you. This page teaches the exact order types youll use every day (market, limit, stop), how stop-loss and take-profit really work, how to plan risk/reward, and how to size positions so one trade cannot wipe the account.
Every trade must have: entry, stop-loss, and a plan to exit. No exceptions.
- Market vs Limit vs Stop orders
- Stop-loss placement that makes sense
- Take-profit logic (targets/partials)
- Risk/reward + position sizing
1) Order types (Market, Limit, Stop) - simple + correct
The order type decides how you get filled. Beginners lose money by using the wrong order for the situation. You dont need 50 order types - you need 3 used correctly.
| Order type | Meaning | When to use | Main risk | Beginner rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Market order | Buy/sell instantly at best available price | When execution speed matters (entries/exits) | Slippage in fast moves | Avoid in low liquidity or major news spikes |
| Limit order | Buy/sell only at your price or better | Planned entries on pullback / retest | May not get filled | If you miss the trade, dont chase it |
| Stop order | Triggers after price hits a level (often becomes market) | Breakouts / stop-loss exits | Whipsaw + slippage | Dont place stop entries inside random noise |
| Stop-limit | Stop triggers a limit (controls price) | Breakouts with slippage control | No fill during fast move | Accept missed trades rather than bad fills |
A stop-loss is an exit order that closes your trade when price hits a level where your trade idea is wrong. Its the difference between a planned loss and a disaster.
A take-profit is an exit order that closes your trade when price hits your target. It protects profits and keeps you consistent (especially when emotions start).
A bracket is a set: entry + stop-loss + take-profit planned together. It forces discipline and makes every trade measurable.
2) Stop Loss (the correct way to place it)
The stop is placed where your idea is invalid - not where you hope it wont go. If you cant explain why your stop is there, your stop is random.
Invalidation means: If price reaches this level, the reason I entered is no longer true.
Example thinking: trend continuation -' stop beyond the structure that would break the trend idea.
Tight stops during high volatility get hit by noise. If volatility is high, dont remove the stop - reduce size.
Fix = same risk with a smaller position.
Moving a stop further is turning your plan into a bigger loss. If you adjust, it must reduce risk, not increase it.
- Placing stop exactly at obvious equal highs/lows (common sweep zones)
- Using the same stop distance for every market
- Removing stop because you believe
- Using high leverage so the stop must be tiny
3) Take Profit (how pros decide exits)
A take-profit plan is a rule for consistency. Without it, youll either exit too early (fear) or too late (greed).
Choose a realistic level (previous high/low, range edge, major zone). Best for beginners because its easy to repeat.
Take part of the trade at a reasonable target, then let the rest run with a rule. Good when markets trend but still pull back.
Trail behind structure so big winners can happen. Most beginners trail too tight and get stopped early.
Pick ONE method for 30 days and stick to it. Changing exit logic every trade destroys learning.
4) Risk/Reward (RR) - how to think correctly
Risk/Reward is not a magic number. Its a measurement. You can be profitable with 1:1 or unprofitable with 1:5. What matters is your strategys win rate + discipline + costs.
| Concept | Meaning | Correct beginner use |
|---|---|---|
| Risk | Planned loss if stop hits | Keep fixed (0.25%-1% per trade) |
| Reward | Planned profit at target | Set based on structure, not hope |
| RR ratio | Reward Risk | Aim for reasonable setups; dont force huge RR in random markets |
A perfect 1:3 RR means nothing if your entries are random. First build a repeatable setup, then optimize RR.
The tighter the target, the more spreads and slippage matter. Beginners should avoid ultra-tight scalping.
A small edge applied consistently is stronger than one lucky big win.
5) Position sizing (the rule that keeps you alive)
Position sizing means your stop-loss equals the same risk amount every time. This is how professionals survive losing streaks.
- Pick risk per trade (example: 0.5% of account).
- Place your stop based on structure.
- Adjust your position size so if stop hits, you lose exactly that risk.
If your platform provides a risk calculator or position size calculator, use it. Thats what its for.
- Risk per trade: 0.25%-1%
- Max loss per day: -2R (example)
- Max loss per week: -5R (example)
- Same size every trade even when stop distance changes
- Bigger size after losses
- All-in mindset
- Hidden overexposure with multiple correlated trades
6) Common execution mistakes (and how to fix them)
| Mistake | What it looks like | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Chasing entries | You missed the move -' enter late anyway | If missed, skip. Wait for next planned setup. |
| No stop loss | You hope it comes back | Stop required. If you cant place it, reduce size or dont trade. |
| Revenge trading | You lose -' instantly trade again bigger | Daily max loss. When hit, stop. |
| Trading illiquid times | Spread spikes, random wicks, bad fills | Trade active sessions/liquidity, avoid dead hours. |
| Over-leverage | Tiny stop because position is too big | Lower leverage, size properly, accept normal stop distances. |
- Every trade uses a stop-loss
- Fixed risk per trade (no exceptions)
- A daily max loss limit
- Journal trades with screenshots
- If emotions spike: stop trading
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