Gdax Stop Buy
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T7 supports various order types like pure market orders, limit orders, stop orders (automatic issuing of limit orders or market orders when a given price is reached), immediate-or-cancel (IOC) orders, non-display orders, among others.
A stop order is an order that is initially inactive. It is not able to match and it is not included in the public market data. When the market reaches the price level that is given by the stop price of the stop order, then the stop order is triggered, i.e. it is converted to an active regular order and, if possible, matched according to the rules for incoming regular orders.
There is no guarantee that a triggered stop order is matched immediately after it is triggered. It is treated just as any incoming regular order and will be placed on the order book, if it cannot be matched.
A stop order can be a stop limit order or a stop market order. A triggered stop limit order is converted to a limit order, and a triggered stop market order is converted to a market order. Currently Eurex supports only stop market orders.
An OCO order has both a limit price and a stop price. On entry, it first behaves exactly like a regular limit order. It can match like a regular limit order, and it contributes to the published market data.
The stop price defines a trigger condition just as for stop orders. Once the trigger condition is fulfilled, the OCO order behaves like a stop market order, i.e. it gets a new priority timestamp and is converted to an incoming market order. The limit price does not apply anymore. When several stop orders and OCO orders are triggered, T7 does not distinguish between stop orders and OCO orders when working out the sequence of processing.
An OCO order that fulfills the trigger condition on entry is rejected by the system. I.e. contrary to stop orders, immediate conversion to regular market orders is in general not supported for OCO orders.
Some seasoned traders on discussion forums like Hacker News basically shrugged at the news, and said such events are not uncommon in foreign exchange trading, and that those who placed the stop-loss orders should have known better. Others noted this just how markets work, and praised GDAX for how they handled it:
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For example, if you are trading a $50,000 account, and you choose a risk management stop loss of 2%, you could risk up to $1,000 on any given trade. The powerful beauty of this rule is that if you strictly adhere to it, you would have to make dozens of consecutive 2% losing trades in order to lose all the money in your account. Even for a new trader, this is highly unlikely.
The 2% Rule also creates a structure for your trading decisions, as illustrated in Table 2. For example, assuming you have a $50,000 account and you want to buy 5 Canadian Dollar contracts, the 2% Rule tells you that you could risk no more than 20 ticks on the trade (5 contracts x $10/tick x 20 ticks = $1,000). If you wanted to operate with a more liberal 50-tick stop, you could only buy 2 contracts. Similarly, if you wanted to buy a larger position, say 20 contracts, you could risk no more than a scant 5 ticks.
Using the stop-loss threshold in conjunction with a predetermined risk/reward ratio also can help you establish exit points on your profitable trades. For example, assuming a 2:1 risk/reward-ratio, if you are risking 20 ticks on your 5 Canadian Dollar contracts, you should be looking to make 40 points, thereby making $2,000 if the market goes your way and only losing $1,000 if you get stopped out.
A trailing stop limit order is a limit buy or sell order that is triggered once a cryptocurrency touches a trailing amount set by the user. A stop-limit is a combination of a stop order and a li