I really like the idea of being able to setup a conditional trade such that, if the price (of an otherwise rising share) drops by more than a certain % then a sell instruction is automatically issued.
Good article about 'how to setup a stoploss system' over here:
http://www.uknetguide.co.uk/Finance/Article/How_to_Set_Up_a_Stoploss_System.html
So I've bought RHG shares at 0.25c (over a year ago) and they're now trading at 0.40c. The advice I'm getting is that they will likely continue to rise. The thing is, I'm a value investor, not a day trader, so at some point it's possible that the advice I'm taking will recommend that the share price is now overvalued and therefore likely to fall once investors wake up to this. But I'm still happy to enjoy holding onto shares if the short-term emotion/irrationality of the market continues to push the price up. So by my way of thinking, it's much smarter to have in place a "% price drop" conditional instruction to sell the shares, as opposed to a conditional instruction to sell should the shares drop to a certain price (e.g. 0.36c), because the % approach is continually revising the sell price upwards. As a value investor of course I don't want to have to watch a share price every day and be manually raising the stop-loss sell price if a share price continues to rise.
a) Am I making sense?
b) Do any online share trading services offer a "% price drop" stop-loss service?
Thanks!
Good article about 'how to setup a stoploss system' over here:
http://www.uknetguide.co.uk/Finance/Article/How_to_Set_Up_a_Stoploss_System.html
Stop-loss orders can also be used to lock in profits. In this case, the order is set at a percentage level below not the price at which you bought the share but the current market price. The price of the stop loss adjusts as the share price fluctuates.
So I've bought RHG shares at 0.25c (over a year ago) and they're now trading at 0.40c. The advice I'm getting is that they will likely continue to rise. The thing is, I'm a value investor, not a day trader, so at some point it's possible that the advice I'm taking will recommend that the share price is now overvalued and therefore likely to fall once investors wake up to this. But I'm still happy to enjoy holding onto shares if the short-term emotion/irrationality of the market continues to push the price up. So by my way of thinking, it's much smarter to have in place a "% price drop" conditional instruction to sell the shares, as opposed to a conditional instruction to sell should the shares drop to a certain price (e.g. 0.36c), because the % approach is continually revising the sell price upwards. As a value investor of course I don't want to have to watch a share price every day and be manually raising the stop-loss sell price if a share price continues to rise.
a) Am I making sense?
b) Do any online share trading services offer a "% price drop" stop-loss service?
Thanks!