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Stop Loss Strategies

A stop loss is your emergency exit. Learn where to place it, how to trail it, and why most traders set stops at the worst possible levels.

What Is a Stop Loss?

A stop loss is a predetermined price level at which you exit a losing trade. It is the maximum loss you are willing to accept on a position. When the price reaches your stop loss, you close the trade immediately -- no exceptions, no hoping, no averaging down.

Think of a stop loss as a fire alarm in your home. You hope it never goes off, but when it does, you do not debate whether the fire is real. You act immediately. Similarly, when your stop loss is hit, you exit without hesitation. The trade thesis has been invalidated.

On Indian broking platforms like Zerodha (Kite), Groww, and Angel One, you can place SL orders (Stop Loss Market or Stop Loss Limit) that automatically trigger when the price reaches your specified level. This removes the emotional burden of manually exiting a losing trade.

The most common mistake among Indian retail traders is trading without a stop loss. NSE data shows that over 89% of F&O traders lose money, and the primary reason is not bad entries but poor risk management -- specifically, letting losses run indefinitely.

Fixed Percentage Stop Loss

The simplest stop loss method: exit if the price drops by a fixed percentage from your entry. Common percentages range from 1-3% for intraday trades and 5-8% for swing trades.

Stop Loss Price = Entry Price x (1 - SL Percentage)

For long positions: SL = Entry x (1 - %). E.g., Rs 2,500 x (1 - 0.02) = Rs 2,450

For short positions: SL = Entry x (1 + %). E.g., Rs 2,500 x (1 + 0.02) = Rs 2,550

Advantages

  • Extremely simple to calculate and implement
  • Works on any stock, index, or timeframe
  • Consistent risk per trade when combined with position sizing
  • Good starting point for beginners

Disadvantages

  • Ignores market structure (support, resistance)
  • Same percentage does not suit all stocks (volatile vs stable)
  • Often placed at predictable round numbers where stop hunting occurs
  • Can be too tight for volatile stocks like Adani or too wide for stable stocks like HDFC Bank

ATR-Based Stop Loss

The Average True Range (ATR) measures a stock's average daily price movement. Using ATR for stop losses automatically adjusts your stop distance based on the stock's actual volatility. This is the preferred method among professional traders.

Stop Loss = Entry Price - (ATR x Multiplier)

ATR = Average True Range (typically 14-period)

Multiplier = 1.5x for aggressive, 2x for moderate, 3x for conservative

Example: Nifty ATR(14) = 180 points. SL = Entry - (180 x 2) = Entry - 360 points

ATR Stop Loss on Reliance (Swing Trade)

Reliance entry: Rs 2,500. ATR(14) on daily chart = Rs 42. Multiplier: 2x.

Stop Loss = Rs 2,500 - (Rs 42 x 2) = Rs 2,416

This gives Rs 84 of breathing room, calibrated to Reliance's actual volatility. During earnings season when ATR expands to Rs 65, the stop would automatically widen to Rs 2,370, preventing premature exits.

ATR Stop Loss on Bank Nifty (Intraday)

Bank Nifty entry: 52,000. ATR(14) on 15-min chart = 120 points. Multiplier: 1.5x.

Stop Loss = 52,000 - (120 x 1.5) = 51,820

Risk per lot (30 units) = 180 x 30 = Rs 5,400. This accounts for normal market noise on the 15-minute timeframe without giving back too much profit.

Support-Based Stop Loss

A support-based stop loss is placed just below a key support level identified on the chart. The logic is simple: if support breaks, the trade thesis is invalid, and you should exit. This method aligns your stop loss with actual market structure rather than arbitrary numbers.

Horizontal Support

Place SL 0.5-1% below a horizontal support level where price has bounced multiple times. E.g., Nifty support at 24,000 -- set SL at 23,880.

Moving Average Support

Use the 20 EMA, 50 SMA, or 200 SMA as dynamic support. Place SL below the MA by a small buffer. E.g., HDFC Bank 50 SMA at Rs 1,620 -- SL at Rs 1,605.

Trendline Support

Draw a trendline connecting swing lows. Place SL below the trendline. Trendline breaks often lead to accelerated selling.

Previous Day Low

For intraday trades, the previous day's low acts as strong support. Place SL a few points below PDL. Widely used for Bank Nifty intraday setups.

Support-Based SL on Nifty

Nifty forms a double bottom at 24,150. You go long at 24,250 on the breakout candle.

Support-based SL: Place below the double bottom at 24,120 (30 points below support).

This gives a stop distance of 130 points (Rs 9,750 per lot). If 24,150 support breaks, the double bottom pattern fails and you should not be in the trade.

Trailing Stop Loss

A trailing stop loss moves in the direction of your trade as the price moves in your favor. It locks in profits while giving the trade room to continue running. The stop only moves in one direction -- it never moves back.

Fixed Point Trailing SL

Trail your stop loss by a fixed number of points as price advances. E.g., for every 50-point rise in Nifty, move your SL up by 50 points. Entry at 24,500 with SL at 24,400. Nifty reaches 24,600 -- move SL to 24,500 (breakeven). Nifty reaches 24,700 -- move SL to 24,600. You are now guaranteed at least Rs 7,500 profit per lot.

ATR Trailing Stop (Chandelier Exit)

Trail the stop at a fixed ATR multiple from the highest high since entry. SL = Highest High - (ATR x 3). This automatically widens during volatile periods and tightens during quiet periods. Bank Nifty traders often use 2x ATR on the 5-minute chart for intraday trailing.

Moving Average Trail

Use a moving average as your trailing stop. Stay in the trade as long as price remains above the 20 EMA (aggressive) or 50 EMA (conservative). For swing trades on Nifty stocks like Infosys or TCS, the 20 EMA on the daily chart is an effective trailing mechanism.

Swing Low Trail

After each higher low forms on the chart, move your stop to just below the most recent swing low. This is a pure price-action trailing method. It keeps you in strong trends and exits only when the trend structure breaks.

Time-Based Stop Loss

A time-based stop loss exits a trade after a specified duration, regardless of profit or loss. The logic: if the trade has not moved in your favor within a certain time, the edge has likely evaporated.

Intraday Time Stop

If your intraday trade has not hit your target by 2:30 PM IST, exit before 3:15 PM. Avoid holding losing positions into the close hoping for a last-minute reversal.

Swing Trade Time Stop

If a swing trade has not moved meaningfully in 5-7 trading days, consider exiting. Capital tied up in stagnant trades has an opportunity cost.

Event-Based Time Stop

If you entered before an event (earnings, RBI policy, budget), and the expected move has not occurred within 1-2 sessions after the event, exit the trade.

Options Expiry Time Stop

For weekly Nifty/Bank Nifty options, if your trade is not profitable by Wednesday afternoon, consider exiting to avoid Thursday's intense Theta decay.

Bracket & Cover Orders on Indian Platforms

Indian brokers offer special order types that automate stop loss placement:

Bracket Order (BO) - Zerodha Kite

A bracket order simultaneously places three orders: entry, stop loss, and target. When either the SL or target is hit, the other is automatically cancelled. Zerodha offers additional leverage for BO orders. Example: Buy Nifty Futures at 24,500 with SL at 24,430 (70 points) and Target at 24,640 (140 points). Both orders are placed automatically.

Cover Order (CO)

A cover order pairs your entry with a compulsory stop loss. It offers higher intraday leverage than regular MIS orders because the risk is defined. Available on most major Indian brokers. The SL must be within a specified range from the entry price.

SL-M vs SL-L Orders

SL-M (Stop Loss Market): Triggers a market order when the trigger price is hit. Guarantees execution but may have slippage. Best for liquid instruments like Nifty and Bank Nifty. SL-L (Stop Loss Limit): Triggers a limit order. May not execute in fast-moving markets if price gaps through your limit. Use SL-M for stop losses and SL-L for profit targets.

Where NOT to Place Stops

"I will keep my stop loss at a round number like 24,000"

Round numbers (24,000, 52,000, Rs 2,500) are magnets for stop hunting. Large traders and algorithms push price to these levels to trigger retail stops before reversing. Place stops a few points beyond round numbers (e.g., 23,970 instead of 24,000).

"I will set my stop at the exact support level"

Support levels are zones, not exact prices. If Nifty support is at 24,150, placing your SL at exactly 24,150 invites stop hunting. Price often dips below support by a few points before bouncing. Place stops 0.3-0.5% below the support zone, not at the exact level.

"I will use a very tight stop to limit losses"

Extremely tight stops (e.g., 20 points on Nifty futures) get triggered by normal market noise. You end up taking many small losses that add up to a large loss. Stop distance should accommodate normal volatility. Use ATR to calibrate -- never tighter than 1x ATR on your trading timeframe.

"I do not need a stop loss because I am a long-term investor"

Even investors need exit rules. Ask anyone who held Yes Bank from Rs 400 to Rs 2, or DHFL from Rs 600 to Rs 0. Fundamental deterioration can destroy capital. Long-term investors should use wider stops (15-20% or below the 200 DMA) but must still have exit rules.

"I will mentally keep a stop loss and exit when needed"

Mental stops fail because emotions override logic in the heat of the moment. When Nifty is crashing and your P&L shows -Rs 15,000, your brain will convince you to hold. Always place your stop loss order in the system immediately after entry. No exceptions.

Stop Loss Principles

Before the Trade

Decide your stop loss BEFORE entering. If you cannot define a logical stop, do not take the trade. The SL determines position size, not the other way around.

Never Widen a Stop

Moving your stop further away to avoid being stopped out is the most destructive habit in trading. It turns a planned small loss into an unplanned large loss.

One Direction Only

Stops move only in the direction of profit. Tighten your stop as the trade moves in your favor. Never move it backward to give the trade more room.

Accept the Loss

A triggered stop loss is not a failure. It is risk management working as designed. Professional traders celebrate good stop loss exits because they preserved capital for the next trade.

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