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Just realized how many traders mess up their exits. They nail the entry, watch profits pile up, and then either cash out way too early or hold too long hoping for more. Sound familiar? Here's the thing about tp1 and tp2 that most people get wrong.
Let me break this down. When you see a signal like "Buy XRP 0.540–0.545, TP1: 0.552, TP2: 0.561, SL: 0.532" — those target levels aren't just random numbers. TP1 is your first exit point where you lock in some gains. TP2 is where you could catch even bigger profits if the momentum keeps going. It's basically giving yourself multiple chances to win instead of betting everything on one move.
Why split your exit into two targets? Because markets don't follow a script. Sometimes price bounces off TP1 and reverses. Other times it blasts past TP2. If you dump everything at TP1, you're leaving serious money on the table when the trend is actually strong. If you wait for TP2 without taking profits at tp1 first, one candle can wipe you out. The split strategy is about having your cake and eating it too — securing profits early while keeping exposure for the bigger move.
Here's how I actually trade it. Say I'm throwing $300 at a signal with tp1 and tp2 levels. I'll sell half my position at TP1 — that's my safety net, my guaranteed profit lock. Then I let the other half ride to TP2. Some traders go 70/30 if they're more conservative, or flip it if they're aggressive. The point is you're not gambling on one outcome.
One move that changed my game: once TP1 hits, I move my stop loss to breakeven on the remaining position. Now I can't lose on that trade anymore. It's risk-free upside. That's the real edge.
The mistakes I see constantly? People dump everything at TP1 and miss the real move. Or they hold for TP2 without securing anything, and a sudden dip erases their gains. The worst is trading with no stop loss at all — one reversal and you're done.
Let's say SOL is trading around $145–$147. You buy at that level with TP1 at $151 and TP2 at $158. You put in $500. You sell $250 at TP1, pocket that win, then let the other $250 ride to TP2 or even trail a stop if it keeps climbing. That's how you balance the quick scalp with the bigger trend.
The real skill in trading isn't picking winners. It's knowing when to get out. Everyone obsesses over entries, but exits are where fortunes are made or lost. TP1 and TP2 are your safety net and your growth lever at the same time. Use them with intention, and you'll stop trading like you're hoping and start trading like you have a plan.