For many brokerages, setting the stop loss is a two-step process. First you have to buy the stock then you have to enter a sell order as a stop loss. If you only want to have 2% loss, you have to calculate the new sale price by hand.
To help customers minimize their losses, brokerages should use the Default Heuristic from Behavioral Finance to automatically set a stop loss. When someone purchases a stock, a stop loss should be automatically set at a 2% loss. This allows a little fluctuation after the stock is purchased but still limits the total loss to 2% plus transactions fees. Of course you can always remove the stop loss or change the price.
A 2% Stop Loss for Google
This benefit can be taken one step further by increasing the strike price of the stop loss as the stock gains value. If the stock increases by 3% from the original purchase price, then the stop loss should be reset at 1% above the purchase price (2% below the current price). This will lock in any gains that the investor receives. As the stock continues to increase in value, the stop loss would also continue to increase always trailing by 2%. When the stop loss is triggered, the investor just needs to reevaluate whether they still want to be in that particular stock. While a 1% gain does not sound like much, if that 1% was realized in only one month then the stock would have an effective annual interest rate of 8.7%
The Stop Loss automatically Increases with gains.
Using the Default Heuristic, online brokerages like E*Trade and Fidelity could minimize the losses for their customers while helping to lock in any gains. If someone told me that the most I could lose on an investment is 2% but any gains that I received would be locked in, I would feel very confident about that investment.
1 comment:
I like the thought of increasing the strike price of the stop loss as the stock gains value to lock in and protect gains yet I wonder if setting a stop loss sell order when a stock loses 2% of value is a good idea? This locks in a loss when the market has a fluctuation and guarantees a loss every time. Perhaps setting a stop loss sell order that is uniquely based on the stock's historic rate of fluctuation (so a loss greater than the historic short-term fluctuation rate) would provide an individualized level of cushion room to absorb market fluctuations with out exposing the buyer to unnecessary short term loss on a more generalized regular basis. What do you think?
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