@CryptoCred - Trade Management
@CryptoCred - Trade Management
Management
By @CryptoCred
Outline
● Disclaimer
● General Remarks
● Definition & Context
● Framework
○ Evidence-based approach
○ Time frames
○ Managing both sides of a trade
○ Time-based management
○ Moving stops ‘versus’ taking profit
○ Dynamic R:R/Evolving R
○ ‘Risk-free’ trades
● Trade Management Psychology & Tips
● Conclusion
Disclaimer
Neither this presentation, nor anything on my Twitter, Telegram, or any other medium/mode of
communication, including private correspondence, constitute financial advice.
● Definition: Set of decisions made between opening a position and fully closing it
● This video does not explicitly address:
○ Compounding/pyramiding/laddering
○ Automated strategies
○ When/how/whether to scale in and out of positions
● Hard video to make
○ Management has many variables and is often linked to one’s entry technique(s) and styles; I can’t
account for all of them
● Manual traders with a price chart focus and a system allowing for some degree of
discretion will benefit most from this video
● Aim: provide a framework for thinking about trade management which spurs independent
research and addresses common errors → end result is a largely systematic approach to
trade management
Evidence-Based Approach
● Two meanings
○ Investigate whether you would benefit from actively managing your trades
■ Straightforward process if you keep a trading journal
■ If actively manage trades, is it to your benefit? What would returns be over X trades if left
to original entry/target/stop?
■ If trades aren’t actively managed, could you benefit? How many trades turn around before
take profit/allow for early exit?
○ Key question: Are developments in price since my entry aligned with my expectations for this trade idea?
■ Is price reacting as expected to my technical structure/its break?
■ Is price moving in the expected direction within a reasonable time period?
■ Is price breaking support/resistance or making new lows/highs?
■ Are buyers/sellers stepping in where they should be if my idea is correct?
■ Just a few examples, but the idea is to exercise your discretion to always be reassessing
whether the ‘evidence’ (price action) supports your position - within reason!
Time Frames
● This section addresses the topic of what time frame to employ when managing trades
○ It also presumes that the framework for managing trades is on the basis of a candle close
● Competing considerations
○ If the management time frame is too high, opportunities for management may be unavailable
○ If the management time frame is too low, management may be excessive or unreasonable
● Management time frame is contingent on the time frame of the trade itself
○ Intraday trades will require intraday management
○ Higher time frame trades are better suited for higher time frame management
● Practical tip: manage on entry time frame or one time frame lower
○ W1 setup: W1 and D1 management
○ D1 setup: D1 and H4 management
○ H4/H1 setup: H4/H1 and M30/M15 management
● Not a law of nature; play around with it & experiment but above is a solid foundation
○ Personally: lots of H1 management of D1 setups
Managing Both Sides of a Trade
● Definition: Managing trades that are at a loss (prior to stop loss order) as well as those that are
in profit (prior to take profit order)
● Traders will rush to protect profits on a trade that is winning but often happily leave a
losing trade to be stopped out → unreasonable
○ If you can exercise your discretion ahead of a take profit order to lock in gains, you can do so ahead
of a stop loss order to mitigate losses
● Consistently reducing -1R losers to less than a full size stop out will make a meaningful
difference to your equity curve over time and make you a better trade manager
● Examples:
○ Sold resistance, price has flipped it and is using it as support
○ Faded an impulsive move into structure with sellers nowhere to be seen
○ Very weak reaction at support followed by closes through it
● Don’t surrender to fate; you’re not a Soviet grandmother
Time-based Management
● Central premise: some trade ideas have an ‘expiry date’
● Price-based management is intuitive, but some trade ideas are time-sensitive
○ Time-based management is managing trades that do not materialise within their given window
● If you are not seeing what you expect to see when you should be seeing it, that in itself can
be an exit/management signal
● Best explained via examples:
○ Setups premised on trapped traders (SFP, failed breakouts, price trading beyond a value area or
‘liquidity’ pool) → assume fast rejection if the setup is really a trap
■ As more time progresses, the probabilities shift from ‘trap’ to ‘genuine breakout’
○ Setups premised on momentum continuation (market structure, closes through levels) → assume
aggressive participation i.e. price not stalling once structure is exceeded
○ Setups premised on support/resistance or equivalent structures → if price spends too much time
at structure without offering a reaction or moving away, the probabilities shift from ‘bounce’ to
‘failure’
Moving Stops ‘Versus’ Taking Profit
● Mechanisms for exiting a profitable trade
○ Take profit order being filled
○ Manually closing a position at market
○ Stop order above entry if long / below entry if short being executed
● Technically, you can trade and never ‘take profit’ and instead continually move your stop
loss as the market moves in your favour until you are stopped out in profit
○ Risks: Assumes trending environment, assumes that clear levels for new invalidation will form, and
‘obvious’ areas for trailed stops often get tagged prior to trend continuation
● No right or wrong way, but depends on your trading style and market conditions (among
other factors)
○ Trend-following system in a trending market = more likely to capture bigger portion of trend with
trailing stops
○ Mean-reverting and/or swing trading systems in a ranging environment = fixed profit-taking at
range boundaries, ATR etc.
Dynamic R:R/Evolving R
● I first came across Tom Dante’s articulation
● Premise: The R:R of a trade is not static. It adjusts as soon as the trade is live and price moves
away from entry i.e. it is a dynamic calculation (or consideration).
● Question to ask yourself: is the R:R of a trade reasonable in its current state?
○ Alternatively: If someone offered you the current price, your current stop loss order, and your
current take profit order as a trade right now, would you take it?
■ Yes → good!
■ No → R:R of the trade is less favourable; manage it (via moving stop loss order and/or by
taking profits)
● Dynamic R:R is especially important when you really get onside with a big thrust candle
○ How close is the trade to target?
○ Where is the nearest structure I could use to define my risk, if any?
○ If no new invalidation level whilst being so close to target, is the R:R justifiable?
● Example: 20 point stop and 40 point target. Price moves 35 points in one candle, 5 from
target.
‘Risk-free’ Trades
● Premise: Moving a trade to break even as soon as possible after it moves positively away from
entry removes all risk from the trade i.e. it is a free trade
● When moving to break even makes sense:
○ Technical invalidation level aligns with entry price (usually rare).
○ Price has moved significantly away from entry but not provided a new invalidation level.
● Reasons to be sceptical of automatically moving to break even:
○ It’s not risk-free. The risk becomes getting stopped out while still being right before your idea can
materialise.
○ Price will very often retest technical structures, especially if they are HTF levels.
○ You end up buying the resistance you sold / selling the support you bought.
○ Fettering discretion / abandoning technical trading framework → the market doesn’t know or care
where your break even level is
■ If you entered using technicals, why not manage using technicals?
Trade Management Psychology & Tips
● Focus on good trading i.e. the trading process → following rules/a framework
○ Trading your PnL becomes an emotionally-driven and, worse, unreplicable endeavour
○ The market does not know or care about your trade parameters
● A good entry is not a prerequisite but it is valuable
○ Anecdotally, easier to manage trades which take less ‘heat’; not as eager to jump out
○ Higher likelihood that you will be able to move to break even based on technical factors (still may
not always be the best idea for reasons stated)
○ Less stress via early indication that you’re likely to be on the right side
● Make sure there’s something to manage!
○ Give your idea a chance to unfold. There’s a ‘dead zone’ between your stop loss and take profit
where your job is most likely to do nothing.
● Market doesn’t know or care whether you’ve been losing or winning
○ Trading in contravention to your established system based on previous trades is sacrificing good
process for PnL ‘comfort’ → not sustainable
Conclusion
● Trade management is not easy
○ Screen time and live experience are irreplaceable; your journal and observations will be far more
valuable and actionable than any YouTube video or book
● If you’re a manual trader with room for discretion, use your discretion!
○ Reassess and reevaluate the trade with fresh eyes (both in terms of price developments as well as
R:R) where appropriate
○ Reducing losses is just as important as securing profits
● Trade the chart, not your PnL
○ The rational, replicable, and long-term beneficial focus is the trading process → trade well and in
accordance with your system rather than the red/green on the screen
○ If you’re a technical trader, act like one!
● Personally:
○ Is price action developing as I would reasonably expect it to if my trade idea is correct?
○ What is the evidence for/against my position?
Fin
Thanks for watching!
@CryptoCreddy (Medium)