DislikedThere are no set guidelines for this stuff since it is highly dependent on your timeframe.
Sure the trade should move "in your direction" ASAP, but what's ASAP?
For 4h, is that 1-4 hours? 8 hours?
For daily is it the next daily bar? Also sometimes there's a period of "winding up" first.
As for cutting - not a good idea. Only if the situation you entered from changes radically intervene, otherwise have a reason for the entry, a reason for the stop and then STEP AWAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Don't interfere. If you do, you WILL ruin a perfectly fine trade a lot of times off of emotion - at least in my experience.
Also that "a good trade never(hardly ever) retraces" logic is completely false imho.
Tons of moves go: trendline break, trendline retest, sometimes double retest, kickoff. Bar break, move out, bar high/low retest, actual move.
It's the market's way of saying "nyer, that's what you get for moving stops to break even after 5 minutes". A lot of the money a lot of times waits until the market commits, then looks for a retest to join the real move imho. Not that I KNOW, but it's what I see a lot.
Think about it...if you're right about the REAL direction of the market and you are not in a range...there are only 2 directions: for you and against you.
If you have a good reason and a stop linked to it, how can you be stopped?
If your trade is to work, it will. If not, it won't.
Being too rash with stops is just being afraid to be wrong.
In my experience - this is with MY style of trading(i.e. not a 5 minute chart) - you won't get far if you don't even allow your trades a chance to actually "go somewhere" first.
Just some random thoughts on the subject from me, doesn't mean this would work for everyone. A lot of it is more biased towards "longer" trades as opposed to "run and grab" style. Different logic applies for a different style.Ignored
DislikedThis isn't the only, or even the best way to trade but there is logic behind it. It seems simple enough and makes sense.Ignored
Something very important that I want to stress here is that a loss is not being down 10 pips while trading a 4hour eur/usd chart; that's just noise. But if I were still down 10 pips after 12 or 16 hours I would scratch the trade and wait for the market to move before entering again.
The thing is big moves don't retrace very much - they tend to be one way trains. So if the market chops back and forth it obviously hasn't left the station yet.
Besides all of this, what I'm getting at is the problem of taking big hits because of wrong thinking and the psychological discomfort of taking a loss.