Do initial stop-losses stop losses?

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Do initial stop-losses stop losses? / Vanstone, Bruce J.
In: The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance, No. 4, 2008, p. 5-8.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Vanstone, BJ 2008, 'Do initial stop-losses stop losses?', The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance, no. 4, pp. 5-8.

APA

Vanstone, B. J. (2008). Do initial stop-losses stop losses? The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance, (4), 5-8.

CBE

Vanstone BJ. 2008. Do initial stop-losses stop losses?. The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance. (4):5-8.

MLA

Vanstone, Bruce J. "Do initial stop-losses stop losses?". The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance. 2008, (4). 5-8.

VancouverVancouver

Vanstone BJ. Do initial stop-losses stop losses? The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance. 2008;(4):5-8.

Author

Vanstone, Bruce J. / Do initial stop-losses stop losses?. In: The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance. 2008 ; No. 4. pp. 5-8.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do initial stop-losses stop losses?

AU - Vanstone, Bruce J

N1 - © Copyright JASSA, 2008. This article is reproduced with permission from Finsia- Financial Services Institute of Australasia.

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - A great many traders use stop-loss rules in their everyday trading. In addition, during periods of high volatility, many traders attempt to protect their downside by moving their stops closer to the price action. However, there appears to be little real justification for doing this. There is a shortage of evidence that demonstrates that stops are actually providing the benefits that traders believe they are. This paper is an empirical study of the use of stops within a defined trading strategy. The methodology used within this paper can easily be ported to any individual traders’ strategy. In the specific case studied in this paper, the results suggest that initial stops degrade long-term portfolio performance.

AB - A great many traders use stop-loss rules in their everyday trading. In addition, during periods of high volatility, many traders attempt to protect their downside by moving their stops closer to the price action. However, there appears to be little real justification for doing this. There is a shortage of evidence that demonstrates that stops are actually providing the benefits that traders believe they are. This paper is an empirical study of the use of stops within a defined trading strategy. The methodology used within this paper can easily be ported to any individual traders’ strategy. In the specific case studied in this paper, the results suggest that initial stops degrade long-term portfolio performance.

M3 - Article

SP - 5

EP - 8

JO - The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance

JF - The Australasian Journal of Applied Finance

SN - 0313-5934

IS - 4

ER -