Stop-Loss Strategies: 5 Ways to Protect Your Capital

A stop-loss is an order that automatically closes your position at a predetermined price to limit your loss. It’s the most important risk management tool in trading. Yet many traders either don’t use stops or use them poorly. This guide covers 5 different stop-loss strategies and when to use each one.

1. Fixed Percentage Stop

The simplest approach: place your stop a fixed percentage below your entry.

  • Day trading: 1-3% stop
  • Swing trading: 3-7% stop
  • Position trading: 7-15% stop

Pros: Simple, consistent risk. Cons: Doesn’t account for market volatility. A 3% stop might be too tight for volatile coins and too loose for stable ones.

2. ATR-Based Stop

Stop at 1.5-2x ATR below entry. Adapts to each coin’s actual volatility. A volatile coin gets a wider stop; a calm coin gets a tighter one. Same dollar risk regardless.

Pros: Adapts to volatility. Fewer premature stops. Cons: Requires calculating ATR for each trade.

3. Structure-Based Stop

Place your stop below the nearest significant support (for longs) or above resistance (for shorts). The logic: if that support/resistance breaks, your trade thesis is invalid.

Pros: Logically sound — the stop is where your trade thesis fails. Cons: Sometimes the structure level is far from entry, requiring very small position size.

4. Trailing Stop

A stop that moves WITH the trade as price moves in your favor. It locks in profits while giving the trade room to run. Methods:

  • Trail with a moving average (20 EMA): exit when price closes below it
  • Trail with ATR: move stop to “highest close minus 2x ATR” each day
  • Manual trailing: move stop below each new higher low as the trend progresses

Pros: Captures the meat of big moves. Cons: Can get stopped out by normal pullbacks within a trend.

5. Time-Based Stop

If the trade hasn’t moved in your direction within a set time (3-5 candles), exit regardless of price. The logic: if the expected move hasn’t happened, the setup may have failed and your capital is better used elsewhere.

Pros: Frees up capital for better opportunities. Cons: Sometimes the move happens right after you exit.

Stop-Loss Rules That Apply to ALL Methods

  • Never move a stop further from entry: This increases your risk after you’ve already entered. Only move stops in the direction of your trade (to lock in profits).
  • Always set your stop BEFORE entering: Decide your exit point first, then calculate position size.
  • Accept that stops will be hit: Getting stopped out is not failure — it’s protection. A stop that saves you from a 30% loss is a success.
  • Don’t set stops at obvious round numbers: Everyone puts stops at $100,000, $50,000, etc. Smart money knows this and hunts these levels. Place your stop slightly beyond obvious levels.

The best stop-loss strategy is the one you actually use consistently. Pick one, practice it on Mal.io, and never trade without it.

Master Your Trading


Mal.io

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