Disliked{quote} Trust me i will look into it...it affects us all at some point or another...Ignored
ITS ABOUT THE CASH NOTHING ELSE.
Do you use stoploss? 648 replies
What stoploss do you use? 27 replies
Maximum lot size you've traded - can brokers hunt orders? 13 replies
forex tip - Don't use a fixed stoploss brokers can target 23 replies
Keep your eyes off my stoploss 3 replies
Disliked{quote} Trust me i will look into it...it affects us all at some point or another...Ignored
Dislikedno i believe the market hunts liquidity and 95% of people think the same wayIgnored
Disliked{quote} lol love your logic get a real broker... So one guy punched an 80 year old grandmother in the face who was in a wheel chair and therefore all guys are therefore scum bag assholes i guess.Ignored
DislikedHi, it is clear that we are all about it,yes or no......... stop loss is the killer of your opened trade. you are not dump when you add stop loss, you are just playing as per the broker rules. flipping has a good chance to overcome the stop loss defect. I do not use stop loss in my trading strategy. I use simple compounding and it is just simple as the flipping method but better than stop loss. yes , the broker can and will hunt your stop loss. when you make a trade, your trade specifications are passed to the market as a complete packaged set includes...Ignored
Disliked{quote} so, this guy who punched an 80 years old grandmother in her tinny face was not being arrested by the police yet....Ignored
Dislikedno i believe the market hunts liquidity and 95% of people think the same wayIgnored
DislikedDo you believe broker hunt target profit too? Or, why is target profit not as easily hit compared to stop loss? I believe this is the brokers' edge over retail traders. I trade a strategy where all my entries into the market is via placing entry orders when a certain price point is reached, and I have both buy and sell orders for the same price point. What I noticed is that for sell orders that are lower than the current market price, they are very readily filled, compared to sell orders that are higher than the current market price. (Similarly,...Ignored
DislikedDo you believe broker hunt target profit too? Or, why is target profit not as easily hit compared to stop loss? I believe this is the brokers' edge over retail traders. I trade a strategy where all my entries into the market is via placing entry orders when a certain price point is reached, and I have both buy and sell orders for the same price point. What I noticed is that for sell orders that are lower than the current market price, they are very readily filled, compared to sell orders that are higher than the current market price. (Similarly,...Ignored
Disliked{quote} you place pending orders and wondering why limit orders are filled with better slippage then stoporders? limitorders have always no or positive slippage, stoporders are market orders after prices was reached (and can so be filled with what ever slippage is in this moment in the market because of the price move). because price moves often over the stoporder level, its ofcourse often negative slippage, same why limitorders have most of the time positive slippage (with good brokers).Ignored
DislikedI am not convinced with this practice being done by any of the broker however for the sake of safe side, can we refrain ourselves from mentioning any stop loss then..?Ignored