When you're forced to cut losses, it usually signals something went wrong with your original trade setup—not just the market direction. A well-planned entry that hits your targets won't trigger stop losses repeatedly. So every time you're taking that exit, ask yourself: was it bad timing, poor risk assessment, or just the trade went against the thesis? Understanding why stops are hit matters more than the stop itself.
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just_another_fish
· 8h ago
To be honest, I hate stop-losses the most. I always get proven wrong.
Repeated stop-losses really mean the strategy is toxic, not the market's fault.
If the entry point is chosen poorly, everything afterward is a waste. Now I keep reflecting on a bunch of things each time.
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RunWithRugs
· 8h ago
What does it mean when stop-loss repeatedly triggers? The entry strategy is the problem, not the market.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 01-18 14:50
Having too many stop-losses is really a sign to reflect on your strategy; otherwise, it's just pure gambling.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 01-18 14:35
Repeated stop-loss triggers, the problem is most likely with the strategy itself, not the market.
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Rekt_Recovery
· 01-18 14:34
yeah ngl every time i get stopped out i'm like "okay self, what the actual hell were you thinking" 💀 usually turns out my entry was just cope dressed up as strategy lmaooo
When you're forced to cut losses, it usually signals something went wrong with your original trade setup—not just the market direction. A well-planned entry that hits your targets won't trigger stop losses repeatedly. So every time you're taking that exit, ask yourself: was it bad timing, poor risk assessment, or just the trade went against the thesis? Understanding why stops are hit matters more than the stop itself.