I've noticed that many newcomers in crypto lose money simply because they don't know how to properly set stop-loss and take-profit levels. These are fundamental risk management tools, but without them, trading turns into a gamble.



It all starts with one question: how much am I willing to lose on this trade? Usually, it's advised not to risk more than 1-2% of your total capital at a time. It sounds conservative, but this approach allows you to trade for the long term without blowing your account in a month.

Next, I look at support and resistance levels. These are the prices where the market typically reverses. For a long position, I set the stop-loss just below support, and the take-profit just below resistance. For a short position, it's the opposite: stop above resistance, and take-profit above support.

But what really helps is the risk-to-reward ratio. I usually work with 1:3, meaning if I risk $100, I aim for at least $300 in profit. Without this ratio, even with a 50% win rate, you can end up in the red.

Let me give my example. I enter a long at $100. Support is visible at $95, resistance at $110. I set the stop-loss at $95 ( risking $5), and the take-profit at $115 ( aiming for $15 in profit). That’s the right ratio.

For a short, the logic is the same but in reverse. Entry at $100, resistance at $105, support at $90. Stop at $105 ( risking $5), and take-profit at $85 ( aiming for $15 in profit).

Technical indicators also help. Moving averages show the trend, RSI indicates when an asset is overbought, ATR helps understand volatility and set stop-loss and take-profit levels more precisely according to current market conditions.

The main thing is not to fixate only on levels. The market changes, and your stops and targets should adapt. I regularly review my positions, see what has changed, and make adjustments. This doesn’t guarantee profit, but it significantly increases your chances of success.
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