Daily One Hot Intraday Tip in Equity to Get You Profit by 11 AM EveryDay.

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Trade Intraday in Future to Quadruple Your Earnings & Finish Before 11 AM Everyday.

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Daily One Option in Intraday is the Order of the Day to Earn Extra Income before 11 AM.

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What is StopLoss & How to Use it to Your Advantage?

The traders are afraid of the word stoploss as they consider it as a sure shot mechanism of losing money in the market. They do not even know the benefits of the stop loss as it is not your enemy but a friend. Here we will tell you how to use the stop loss mechanism to use it to your advantage. Prior to that you must learn that what is a stoploss.

Stoploss is a buy or sell order which gets triggered automatically, once the stock reaches a certain price. The aim here is to limit the loss on a security (buy or sell) position.

A stop order to sell becomes a market order when the item is offered at or below the specified price. E.g.: If you have bought 1 share of RIL at Rs. 1,050, you will enter stoploss order at a price below Rs. 1,050, say Rs. 1,020. If RIL share price falls to Rs. 1,020, a sell stoploss order will get triggered, which limits your loss on account of purchase to Rs. 30.

Similarly, a stop order to buy becomes a market order when the item is bid at or above the specified price. E.g.: If you have short-sold 1 share of RIL at Rs. 1,050, you will enter stoploss order at a price above Rs. 1,050, say Rs. 1,070. If RIL share price rises to Rs. 1,070, a buy stoploss order will get triggered, which will limit your loss on account of sale to Rs. 20.

There are no set rules for stoploss orders. Traders deploy very tight stoploss orders, while investors may not need it also. Advantage of stoploss is it avoids the need for constant monitoring of share price. Its disadvantage is that short-term price fluctuations could trigger stoploss orders very frequently. Also, setting very narrow stoploss for shares historically having wide price fluctuations could lead to unnecessary triggers of stoploss.

E.g.: If you bought 1 share of RIL at Rs. 1050 with stoploss of Rs. 1020. This means that if the stock falls below 1020, your stoploss order will automatically become a market order and share will be sold at the then prevailing market price, not necessarily the stoploss price. Thus setting a stoploss order below the purchase price will limit the loss, but in a very fast-moving market, losses may be higher than expected.

Now the negative of the stop loss is that big operators know where retail traders place stop loss in a trade and at times in collusion mode may take the stock to the level where the stop losses get triggered. Thus to offset any such eventuality; one should use the trailing profit mechanism which we teach and train our clients as a complimentary gesture while they choose any of our package and we enjoy highest success rate in the intraday tips segment.

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