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Stop Loss

The stoploss configuration parameter is loss as ratio that should trigger a sale. For example, value -0.10 will cause immediate sell if the profit dips below -10% for a given trade. This parameter is optional. Stoploss calculations do include fees, so a stoploss of -10% is placed exactly 10% below the entry point.

Most of the strategy files already include the optimal stoploss value.

Info

All stoploss properties mentioned in this file can be set in the Strategy, or in the configuration.
Configuration values will override the strategy values.

Stop Loss On-Exchange/Freqtrade

Those stoploss modes can be on exchange or off exchange.

These modes can be configured with these values:

    'emergency_exit': 'market',
    'stoploss_on_exchange': False
    'stoploss_on_exchange_interval': 60,
    'stoploss_on_exchange_limit_ratio': 0.99

Stoploss on exchange is only supported for the following exchanges, and not all exchanges support both stop-limit and stop-market. The Order-type will be ignored if only one mode is available.

Exchange stop-loss type
Binance limit
Binance Futures market, limit
Huobi limit
kraken market, limit
Gate limit
Okx limit
Kucoin stop-limit, stop-market

Tight stoploss

Do not set too low/tight stoploss value when using stop loss on exchange!
If set to low/tight you will have greater risk of missing fill on the order and stoploss will not work.

stoploss_on_exchange and stoploss_on_exchange_limit_ratio

Enable or Disable stop loss on exchange. If the stoploss is on exchange it means a stoploss limit order is placed on the exchange immediately after buy order fills. This will protect you against sudden crashes in market, as the order execution happens purely within the exchange, and has no potential network overhead.

If stoploss_on_exchange uses limit orders, the exchange needs 2 prices, the stoploss_price and the Limit price.
stoploss defines the stop-price where the limit order is placed - and limit should be slightly below this.
If an exchange supports both limit and market stoploss orders, then the value of stoploss will be used to determine the stoploss type.

Calculation example: we bought the asset at 100$.
Stop-price is 95$, then limit would be 95 * 0.99 = 94.05$ - so the limit order fill can happen between 95$ and 94.05$.

For example, assuming the stoploss is on exchange, and trailing stoploss is enabled, and the market is going up, then the bot automatically cancels the previous stoploss order and puts a new one with a stop value higher than the previous stoploss order.

Note

If stoploss_on_exchange is enabled and the stoploss is cancelled manually on the exchange, then the bot will create a new stoploss order.

stoploss_on_exchange_interval

In case of stoploss on exchange there is another parameter called stoploss_on_exchange_interval. This configures the interval in seconds at which the bot will check the stoploss and update it if necessary.
The bot cannot do these every 5 seconds (at each iteration), otherwise it would get banned by the exchange. So this parameter will tell the bot how often it should update the stoploss order. The default value is 60 (1 minute). This same logic will reapply a stoploss order on the exchange should you cancel it accidentally.

stoploss_price_type

Only applies to futures

stoploss_price_type only applies to futures markets (on exchanges where it's available). Freqtrade will perform a validation of this setting on startup, failing to start if an invalid setting for your exchange has been selected. Supported price types are gonna differs between each exchanges. Please check with your exchange on which price types it supports.

Stoploss on exchange on futures markets can trigger on different price types. The naming for these prices in exchange terminology often varies, but is usually something around "last" (or "contract price" ), "mark" and "index".

Acceptable values for this setting are "last", "mark" and "index" - which freqtrade will transfer automatically to the corresponding API type, and place the stoploss on exchange order correspondingly.

force_exit

force_exit is an optional value, which defaults to the same value as exit and is used when sending a /forceexit command from Telegram or from the Rest API.

force_entry

force_entry is an optional value, which defaults to the same value as entry and is used when sending a /forceentry command from Telegram or from the Rest API.

emergency_exit

emergency_exit is an optional value, which defaults to market and is used when creating stop loss on exchange orders fails. The below is the default which is used if not changed in strategy or configuration file.

Example from strategy file:

order_types = {
    "entry": "limit",
    "exit": "limit",
    "emergency_exit": "market",
    "stoploss": "market",
    "stoploss_on_exchange": True,
    "stoploss_on_exchange_interval": 60,
    "stoploss_on_exchange_limit_ratio": 0.99
}

Stop Loss Types

At this stage the bot contains the following stoploss support modes:

  1. Static stop loss.
  2. Trailing stop loss.
  3. Trailing stop loss, custom positive loss.
  4. Trailing stop loss only once the trade has reached a certain offset.
  5. Custom stoploss function

Static Stop Loss

This is very simple, you define a stop loss of x (as a ratio of price, i.e. x * 100% of price). This will try to sell the asset once the loss exceeds the defined loss.

Example of stop loss:

    stoploss = -0.10

For example, simplified math:

  • the bot buys an asset at a price of 100$
  • the stop loss is defined at -10%
  • the stop loss would get triggered once the asset drops below 90$

Trailing Stop Loss

The initial value for this is stoploss, just as you would define your static Stop loss. To enable trailing stoploss:

    stoploss = -0.10
    trailing_stop = True

This will now activate an algorithm, which automatically moves the stop loss up every time the price of your asset increases.

For example, simplified math:

  • the bot buys an asset at a price of 100$
  • the stop loss is defined at -10%
  • the stop loss would get triggered once the asset drops below 90$
  • assuming the asset now increases to 102$
  • the stop loss will now be -10% of 102$ = 91.8$
  • now the asset drops in value to 101$, the stop loss will still be 91.8$ and would trigger at 91.8$.

In summary: The stoploss will be adjusted to be always be -10% of the highest observed price.

Trailing stop loss, custom positive loss

You could also have a default stop loss when you are in the red with your buy (buy - fee), but once you hit a positive result (or an offset you define) the system will utilize a new stop loss, which can have a different value. For example, your default stop loss is -10%, but once you have more than 0% profit (example 0.1%) a different trailing stoploss will be used.

Note

If you want the stoploss to only be changed when you break even of making a profit (what most users want) please refer to next section with offset enabled.

Both values require trailing_stop to be set to true and trailing_stop_positive with a value.

    stoploss = -0.10
    trailing_stop = True
    trailing_stop_positive = 0.02
    trailing_stop_positive_offset = 0.0
    trailing_only_offset_is_reached = False  # Default - not necessary for this example

For example, simplified math:

  • the bot buys an asset at a price of 100$
  • the stop loss is defined at -10%
  • the stop loss would get triggered once the asset drops below 90$
  • assuming the asset now increases to 102$
  • the stop loss will now be -2% of 102$ = 99.96$ (99.96$ stop loss will be locked in and will follow asset price increments with -2%)
  • now the asset drops in value to 101$, the stop loss will still be 99.96$ and would trigger at 99.96$

The 0.02 would translate to a -2% stop loss. Before this, stoploss is used for the trailing stoploss.

Use an offset to change your stoploss

Use trailing_stop_positive_offset to ensure that your new trailing stoploss will be in profit by setting trailing_stop_positive_offset higher than trailing_stop_positive. Your first new stoploss value will then already have locked in profits.

Example with simplified math:

    stoploss = -0.10
    trailing_stop = True
    trailing_stop_positive = 0.02
    trailing_stop_positive_offset = 0.03
  • the bot buys an asset at a price of 100$
  • the stop loss is defined at -10%, so the stop loss would get triggered once the asset drops below 90$
  • assuming the asset now increases to 102$
  • the stoploss will now be at 91.8$ - 10% below the highest observed rate
  • assuming the asset now increases to 103.5$ (above the offset configured)
  • the stop loss will now be -2% of 103.5$ = 101.43$
  • now the asset drops in value to 102$, the stop loss will still be 101.43$ and would trigger once price breaks below 101.43$

Trailing stop loss only once the trade has reached a certain offset

You can also keep a static stoploss until the offset is reached, and then trail the trade to take profits once the market turns.

If trailing_only_offset_is_reached = True then the trailing stoploss is only activated once the offset is reached. Until then, the stoploss remains at the configured stoploss. This option can be used with or without trailing_stop_positive, but uses trailing_stop_positive_offset as offset.

    trailing_stop_positive_offset = 0.011
    trailing_only_offset_is_reached = True

Configuration (offset is buy-price + 3%):

    stoploss = -0.10
    trailing_stop = True
    trailing_stop_positive = 0.02
    trailing_stop_positive_offset = 0.03
    trailing_only_offset_is_reached = True

For example, simplified math:

  • the bot buys an asset at a price of 100$
  • the stop loss is defined at -10%
  • the stop loss would get triggered once the asset drops below 90$
  • stoploss will remain at 90$ unless asset increases to or above the configured offset
  • assuming the asset now increases to 103$ (where we have the offset configured)
  • the stop loss will now be -2% of 103$ = 100.94$
  • now the asset drops in value to 101$, the stop loss will still be 100.94$ and would trigger at 100.94$

Tip

Make sure to have this value (trailing_stop_positive_offset) lower than minimal ROI, otherwise minimal ROI will apply first and sell the trade.

Stoploss and Leverage

Stoploss should be thought of as "risk on this trade" - so a stoploss of 10% on a 100$ trade means you are willing to lose 10$ (10%) on this trade - which would trigger if the price moves 10% to the downside.

When using leverage, the same principle is applied - with stoploss defining the risk on the trade (the amount you are willing to lose).

Therefore, a stoploss of 10% on a 10x trade would trigger on a 1% price move. If your stake amount (own capital) was 100$ - this trade would be 1000$ at 10x (after leverage). If price moves 1% - you've lost 10$ of your own capital - therfore stoploss will trigger in this case.

Make sure to be aware of this, and avoid using too tight stoploss (at 10x leverage, 10% risk may be too little to allow the trade to "breath" a little).

Changing stoploss on open trades

A stoploss on an open trade can be changed by changing the value in the configuration or strategy and use the /reload_config command (alternatively, completely stopping and restarting the bot also works).

The new stoploss value will be applied to open trades (and corresponding log-messages will be generated).

Limitations

Stoploss values cannot be changed if trailing_stop is enabled and the stoploss has already been adjusted, or if Edge is enabled (since Edge would recalculate stoploss based on the current market situation).

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