The absurdity of a stop loss - page 7

 
Europa:


What's to spiculate with? selling flowers is as much a business as selling ice cream or.... um... newspapers.

I'm not talking about tobacco or alcohol kiosks


I mean,ice cream or condoms or diodes and rectifiers is fine,but flowers... that's sacred.
 
paukas:
Radishes, onions, parsley, dill. But that was under Soviet rule

I mean, in quid.
 
paukas:
Radishes, onions, parsley, dill. But that was under Soviet rule

You've been "bent" by the Soviets...
 
DhP:

The Soviets have got you down...

No, on the contrary, it did.

And on the subject. As soon as you buy more than you have, that's it -

you can yell and shout that stop is bad for you. You already have one.

 

Sanyok's been losing his footing.

 
abolk:

There's something about Sanek's stop


Yeah, they're a little distracted.
 

The absurdity of a stop loss.

I'm thinking to myself: when you write "Bullet", you immediately decide whether to play, pass or whist.

Started the game - don't throw cards...)))

The game is over, then count the losses.

 
DhP:

The absurdity of a stop loss.

I'm thinking to myself: when you write "Bullet", you immediately decide whether to play, pass or whist.

Started the game - don't throw cards...)))

The game is over, then count the losses.


but when you fold a card, for example in poker (and your money is already on the line), isn't that cutting off losses?
 
Avals:

but when you fold a card, for example in poker (and your money is already on the line), isn't that cutting off losses?

Rather, it is deciding NOT to play (read: not to enter the market).
 
sanyooooook:
He would rather throw away than sell at a loss, throwing away means forgetting about the position, but not closing it at a loss price.

This is incorrect.

Forgetting the position means exposing your deposit to the risk of being liquidated by a stop-out.

If he ejects the rest of the product, he has taken a limited loss.