Every trader has a stop-loss story. You set a stop at $125. Price drops to $125.50 and you think, “Maybe I should give it a little more room.” Price drops to $124. “It’ll bounce, it always bounces here.” Price drops to $120. Now you’re frozen. The $300 loss you planned has become a $1,500 loss, and you’re too far underwater to think clearly.
That story has a name: it’s the story of every blown account. Not every time, but most of the time, a blown account starts with one decision — the decision to move, ignore, or “mentally adjust” a stop.
Why Your Brain Fights You
Honoring stops is simple to understand and brutally hard to execute. The reason isn’t intellectual — it’s psychological. When a stock hits your stop, your brain runs through a rapid sequence of rationalizations:
- “It’s right at support, it’ll bounce.” — Maybe. But your stop was placed at this level because you decided in advance that below here, your thesis is wrong. Trust the version of you who planned the trade with a clear head, not the version of you watching a red P&L.
- “I’ll just give it one more day.” — One more day turns into one more week. Small losses become medium losses. Medium losses become catastrophic ones. The slope is always slippery.
- “If I sell here, it’ll bounce immediately.” — Sometimes it will. And that’s fine. You can always re-enter. But the times it doesn’t bounce — the times it drops another 10% — those are the times that end careers. You’re paying insurance against ruin.
- “I don’t want to lock in a loss.” — The loss is already locked in. The market has already moved against you. The only question is whether it’s a small loss (if you honor the stop) or a larger one (if you don’t). You’re not “locking in” anything — you’re preventing it from getting worse.
How to Set Stops That You’ll Actually Honor
Part of the reason traders don’t honor stops is that they set bad ones. A stop placed at a random price with no technical justification will always feel arbitrary — and arbitrary stops are easy to override. Here’s how to set stops you’ll respect:
1. Place Stops Below a Technical Level
Your stop should be below a specific support level — a moving average, a swing low, or a support zone. When that level breaks, your thesis is genuinely wrong. This makes the stop feel logical, not arbitrary.
✕ Bad Stop
“I’ll put my stop $2 below my entry.”
Why it fails: Arbitrary. Not tied to any level. You’ll talk yourself out of it because there’s no technical reason behind it.
✓ Good Stop
“My stop is below the 21 EMA at $186. If price can’t hold the 21, the short-term trend has broken and my thesis is invalid.”
Why it works: Tied to a meaningful level. When it hits, you know the setup failed — it’s not noise, it’s information.
2. Size the Position to the Stop
If your stop is $4 away and you’re comfortable risking $400, buy 100 shares. Not 200. Not 500. Size to the stop so that when it hits, the dollar loss is something you can absorb without flinching. If the stop makes you nervous, you’re too big.
3. Set the Stop in Your Broker Immediately
Not a mental stop. Not a note in your journal. A hard stop order in your broker’s system that will execute automatically if price hits the level. This removes the decision from your hands entirely. When the stop triggers, it’s done. No negotiation, no hesitation, no “maybe I should wait.”
The “I Got Stopped Out and It Bounced” Problem
It happens. You set your stop at $186, it hits $185.90 and triggers, and then the stock bounces to $192 the next day. It feels terrible. You want to scream. And the temptation is to say, “See? Stops don’t work. I should have held.”
Here’s the thing: that outcome doesn’t make the stop wrong. You made the right decision with the information available. The stop was at a logical level. Price broke it — which meant, at that moment, the thesis was failing. That it recovered afterward doesn’t change the fact that you managed your risk correctly.
Over 100 trades, the times you get stopped out and the stock bounces are vastly outnumbered by the times you get stopped out and the stock keeps falling. Stops save you from the catastrophic losses. The occasional “stopped out before the bounce” is the price you pay for that insurance. It’s a good deal.
And remember: you can always re-enter. If the stock reclaims the level with authority — volume, close, follow-through — that’s a new setup. Buy it again. Your first entry was wrong; your second entry has fresh confirmation.
Daily and Weekly Loss Limits
Stops protect you on individual trades. But you also need protection against yourself on bad days. That’s where loss limits come in:
Daily Loss Limit
Rule: If you lose 1-2% of your account in a single day, stop trading for the rest of that session.
Why: Bad days compound. One bad trade leads to revenge trading, which leads to more bad trades. Cut the cycle by walking away.
Weekly Loss Limit
Rule: If you lose 3-5% of your account in a single week, reduce size by 50% the following week.
Why: Extended losing streaks often mean the market environment has changed. Smaller size gives you room to adjust without further damage.
Loss limits are not punishments. They’re guardrails. They exist to protect you from yourself during the moments when your judgment is compromised — which, after a string of losses, it always is.
The Rule
There’s really only one rule in this article, and it’s the most important rule in trading:
Capital preservation is not the exciting part of trading. Nobody writes articles about the trade they didn’t take or the loss they kept small. But it’s the part that determines whether you’re still trading in 5 years, 10 years, or 25 years.
Protect the capital. Everything else follows.