Many novice traders consider tight stop-losses and large take-profits as signs of advanced trading skills, but in practice, these often signal that the account is beginning to shrink.



Where is the core issue? It’s not in the concept itself, but in the incorrect application.

Placing stop-losses very close to the current price implies that you believe the price won't have normal fluctuations. But what is the reality? Price fluctuations are part of daily trading. It’s common to see several points of movement within a day. Putting a stop-loss within such a narrow range essentially means you’re repeatedly being knocked out by market noise.

What’s the result? Even if your market direction prediction is correct, you might be the first to exit. Small losses may seem insignificant individually, but accumulated over time, they cause continuous account drain.

On the other hand, take-profit targets sound attractive, but in reality, the market rarely hits your target price. Every time, you’re betting that the market will keep rising as you expect, but often it just moves a bit, then stalls, consolidates, or pulls back, never reaching your take-profit level.

Over time, stop-losses are triggered frequently, while take-profits remain elusive. If you also have a large position size, your account isn’t suddenly blowing up; it’s being gradually eroded over time.

Another practical detail: stop-loss levels close to the current price are often filled with retail orders. When the price moves slightly, these orders get swept away. This has little to do with your market judgment.

Traders who survive long-term tend to be more disciplined. They don’t set tight stop-losses but base them on solid reasoning. They don’t aim for distant take-profits but focus on consistently locking in profits. The key isn’t how much you make on a single trade, but whether your overall strategy can operate sustainably.

The essence of trading is to complete the rhythm amid repeated fluctuations, not to bet everything on a single move. What you lack isn’t effort; there are plenty of opportunities in this market. What’s truly scarce is finding a reliable method to profit steadily here.
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RektRecordervip
· 12-28 16:48
Honestly, I've been stopped out many times... Now I realize that those who frequently hit stop-loss are actually being played by market noise. --- The key is to have patience, otherwise the account will suffer slow death. --- Basically, it's greed. Always thinking of hitting it in one go, and what happens? Repeatedly getting harvested. --- This analysis hits the mark. Many people are stuck around the same stop-loss levels, and when the price sweeps through, they all get wiped out. It’s heartbreaking. --- Trading isn’t about having a big gut; in fact, the more restraint you have, the longer you survive. --- I used to rely on tight stop-losses and big take-profits, and my account was declining rapidly... Now I understand that stability is much more important than a big win. --- It's that simple once you see through it, but very few people actually do it. I'm still exploring.
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WalletWhisperervip
· 12-27 15:02
Setting stops too tight really just means being repeatedly beaten by market noise, I have deep experience with that. --- Exactly right, retail investors love to gamble on impossible things, and in the end, their accounts are like being gnawed by termites. --- That's the truth, take profit never actually gets booked, and stop loss triggers every day—doesn't that lead to chronic account death? --- Tight stop loss and big take profit, looking professional, is actually just courting death. I've done it myself. --- The key is to find a rhythm; otherwise, no matter how much you tinker, it’s just the same. The market isn't short of opportunities, what’s lacking is a way to survive.
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GamefiHarvestervip
· 12-25 19:53
That's so true. I was cut like that before, setting the stop-loss right at the face, and ended up being shaken out every day, with the account bleeding slowly.
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DAOTruantvip
· 12-25 19:52
That's so true. I was repeatedly eliminated by noise just like that before. Setting stop-loss too tight is really a suicidal trade; that's how my account was gradually eroded.
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ContractTearjerkervip
· 12-25 19:49
That's right, setting the stop-loss too close is like being cut off from the crop live; only through personal experience do you understand this.
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