Futures
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The core advantage of left-side trading is its strong stop-loss control. This time, there was a small error of 11 points at the bottom, and I set a 350-point stop-loss. This way, if I misjudge the direction, the loss can be kept within the expected range.
But the problem is also in front of us—markets don't always follow the usual patterns. Sometimes, the target price can't be reached at all, or the error widens to around 500 points. When faced with this situation, entering on the right side becomes a forced choice. The obvious cost: the stop-loss range expands accordingly, and once there's a loss, it becomes a bigger loss.
In actual operation, when the prediction is correct, everything goes smoothly. But once switching to the right-side entry mode, risk control must be tightened—no longer managing as loosely as on the left side.