“Cut Your Losses, Let Your Profits Run.” Fine, But How Exactly?We’ve all heard it. It’s right up there with “buy low, sell high” in the Hall of Fame of obvious trading advice. Everyone agrees with it. Few people do it.
Why? Because cutting losses hurts. Letting profits run is scary (especially in the current macro ). And both go directly against how human brains are wired.
Still, that simple phrase sits at the core of nearly every profitable trading career ever built. So let’s talk about how traders actually do that in the real world.
🧠 Why Your Brain Hates This Rule
Your brain evolved to avoid the bad stuff and lock in the good stuff. Trading puts that wiring to the test.
When a trade is losing, your instinct is to wait — maybe it’ll bounce. So you avoid facing the bad consequences of your decision. It ain’t a loss unless you sell, right?
When a trade is winning, your instinct is to grab the money before it disappears. That’s called loss aversion, and it’s why so many traders end up with small wins and large losses. Revenge trading usually follows.
The goal here is simple: Make the average win bigger than the average loss. Or, even better, have one big winner that can take care of several small-size losses.
📉 Cutting Losses: Think in Probabilities
Cutting losses doesn’t mean being right less — it means being wrong cheaply. “It's not whether you're right or wrong, but how much money you make when you're right and how much you lose when you're wrong.”
Professional traders assume they will be wrong a lot. They build that expectation into their process and risk profile. When a trade moves against them beyond what they originally planned for, they step aside without drama.
“If you have a losing position that is making you uncomfortable, the solution is very simple: Get out, because you can always get back in.”
A small loss is just a data point. A big loss changes behavior.
The traders who make it treat exits like boring administrative work. Just a clean “this didn’t work, let’s see what’s next.”
📈 Letting Profits Run: The Harder Half
Cutting losses is uncomfortable — but letting profits run is even harder.
When a trade goes your way, your mind immediately starts calculating what you could buy with the gains or how much you’re up just for the day. The idea of losing those profits feels worse than the pain of an initial loss. So traders exit too early, again and again.
The result? They get paid for being right, but not enough to cover when they’re wrong.
Letting profits run means allowing the market to do the work. It means resisting the urge to micromanage every tick. It means giving strong trends time to show themselves.
🧮 The Math That Makes This Work
This rule isn’t philosophical — it’s mathematical (it’s fairly simple, though).
Imagine a trader wins half their trades. If their losses average 1 unit and their wins average 2 units, they’re profitable over time.
But flip it — small wins, large losses — and even being right 60% of the time won’t save you.
Cutting losses protects the downside. Letting profits run expands the upside. Together, they tilt probability in your favor, especially if you’re chasing asymmetrical bets .
That’s the whole game. One good trend pays for ten small losses and the equity curve starts to make some sense.
🧭 The Trader’s Secret Weapon: Risk Profile
The traders who follow this rule best don’t rely on willpower. They rely on a solid risk profile.
They decide in advance:
• How much they’re willing to lose
• Under what conditions they exit
• What signals a trade is still working
By making these decisions before emotions get involved, they remove most of the internal debate when it matters most, especially during high-impact economic data releases .
Trading becomes less about being brave and more about being prepared. In short, the whole thing about cutting your losses and letting your profits run is about embracing small losses without ego and allowing big wins without fear.
Off to you : How do you deal with your losses and wins? Share your approach in the comments!
Cutlosses
[EDU] 3 quick tips when to cut your losses short in tradingHello fellow traders , my regular and new friends!
Welcome and thanks for dropping by my post.
We all don't like or don't want to have a losing trade. But this is inevitable in trading, we have to face it. And, Letting your winning run and cutting your losers short has always been the mantra for profitable trading.
This is where I wanted to share 3 ways that you can go about doing this.
When market structure that you anticipated for the setup is violated.
So what it meant over here is that ,for example, you have a trade entered upon the crossover of a particular pair of EMA, e.g. 50 and 100. Once the crossover flips, you should look to exit the trade.
Or, when your pre-determined stop-loss is hit, and, you should never pull your stoploss. This is quite self-explanatory because the pulling of stoploss level can get you lucky a few times but making it a habit can have disastrous impact to your trading.
Thirdly, Negative price action. This happens when the price action has consistently moved against your trade, meaning to say that constantly you are in the red (losing money). This could be an indication for you to re-evaluate your setup and move on by cutting your losses small if need be. This is especially true if you have noticed that trades that you are in green often validate your entry almost immediately and have positive price actions.
Hope these pointers help you better evaluate the trades you are in and make the best decisions out of it!
Do check out my stream video for the week to have more explanation in place.
Do Like and Boost if you have learnt something and enjoyed the content, thank you!
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Disclaimers:
The analysis shared through this channel are purely for educational and entertainment purposes only. They are by no means professional advice for individual/s to enter trades for investment or trading purposes.
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Are You Cutting Your Winners Short by Trying to be Right?Good trading is a curious mix between taking profits when the market makes them available, and letting profits run to capture big wins.
The problem is that, more often than not, this decision is dictated by emotion rather than reason.
Instead of trusting the statistics behind our edge, we focus on trying to be right on our current position.
Trading is a statistical game
Top traders know their probabilities. They recognise that no matter the quality of their analysis, once they have entered their position, it may or may not go for them.
If they start to second-guess which ones will go and which won’t, then chances are they will cut themselves out of some winners and degrade their system in the process.
Understand the move you are looking to capture
One of the first things to do when developing a system is to get very clear on the moves you are looking to capture.
Once you have identified the types of opportunities you are looking for, you can create a “rule-based” plan to capture those moves with the best risk/reward possible.
You should garner an understanding of how often the moves occur, how long they typically last, and how big the pullbacks can get.
How the need to be “right” manifests itself when exiting
There are three main ways that trying to be right interferes with our exits. This can happen both in the system development phase, and when trading live.
We take profit without a clear exit signal. Be cautious not to take profit just because the market has gone your way. Wait for your pre-determined exit signals, or wait for your objective to be hit.
We trail our stop-loss too tightly. Currency moves can require wide stops, so give the trade room to breathe. It’s no fun being whipsawed out of a trend because of your fear that it might end. Wait for the trade to be well in your favour before trailing your stop.
Moving the stop to breakeven. A breakeven stop can be a good thing. However, if you find you are getting stopped out of winning trades because you have quickly moved your stop to breakeven, then perhaps it is not serving the best purpose.
I’m sure there are several other ways this bias appears in our trading, so remain self-aware.
Journal your interference
Perhaps you are a guru with the skill to know exactly when to get out of your positions.
How to tell?
Make sure you mark in your journal any discretionary exit decisions you make. That way, you can track how well they compare to a “rules-based” approach.
Alternatively, you can allow yourself a small percentage of the position to add and remove at will. By increasing our options this way, we feel good about being right, while still letting our profits run on the majority of the trade.
Good Luck!


