If you’re looking at the greater trend then you’re looking at a course grain chart. Then, executing on a finer grain chart will yield stellar results. Typically, your analysis chart is course grained and your execution chart is fine grained.
So, for example, if you observe a down trend on say the 1h chart and if you take shorts on the 15m chart when the fast MA cross below the slow MA then you have an extremely high probability of success.
Could the trend on the 1h change before you anticipate it to? Sure. And in that case you may make less profit or suffer a loss. But that is true of any trade that you take. It is a matter of probabilities.
I ride trends all the time in the manner explained above and I have an over 95% success rate doing so. This is one of my tried and true bread and butter strategies that is simple and easy to execute and very predictable.
I don’t use MAs however since I’m a pure price action technical trader and as such I don’t typically use indicators. But I’m sure that my entries will correspond closely with an MA crossover.
Perhaps, if I find time, I’ll write up my trend following strategy using MAs in the free strategy section if it has not already been written up by someone.
Regarding exit strategies, there are many specific tools for these but they can be perhaps classified into at least five different categories of tools, and I’m sure others can add a few more:
a fixed number of pips per trade, depending on the TF being used, combined with a stoploss.
a variable number of pips based on a mathematical formula built on prior data, e.g. Pivot levels
a trailing indicator that stops the trade on a pre-defined pullback or manually adjusted level, e.g. trailing stops, previous high/lows, etc
a prediction of a likely ultimate high/low e.g. S/R levels, Fib ratios, etc
a stop-and-reverse strategy such as you mention in your OP
Some people may opt for a combination of these, such as closing a half position at a fixed interval and then the other half with a trailing stop. All of them work best in some markets and worse in others!
Maybe others will have some more thoughts here since exiting is a very underdeveloped, but hugely important topic!
Thanks for those. My comments below are not intended to be argumentative. I’m honestly just trying to gain more knowledge from experienced traders. Hopefully, I have not misunderstood anything. If so, please do correct me.
#1, #2, #3 are too arbitrary. I look for more precise exits so as to not leave too much on the table. That was the whole point in suggesting that some other system other than a fixed risk-reward system be used.
#4 suits a price action trader and he/she should have been able to determine that in advance through analysis and therefore conforms to what I said in my OP.
#5 I did not suggest a reversal strategy, only an exit strategy based on a hypothetical reversal.
Scaling in and out is a more advanced topic so I won’t address that in this thread.