Education · Long-form

Trade Management: What Happens After Entry

Most Stage 2 setup expectancy is built or destroyed in trade management, not in entry. Yet most retail focus is on entry. This page covers the explicit trade-management rules that Stage 2 of Bharath Shiksha installs: scaling in only after confirmation, scaling out at predetermined targets, time stops calibrated to setup data, structural trailing stops, and disciplined re-entries.

Scaling in — only after confirmation

Scale in only after the original thesis has confirmed. For a breakout-retest setup: enter half-size on the retest candle close; add the second half only after a structural higher-high confirms continuation. The total risk on entry remains 1% of account; the partial position is 0.5% risk; the second half adds another 0.5%. Never scale in such that total risk exceeds your per-trade rule. The cardinal sin: scaling in on losers (averaging down). Single most expensive Stage 2 mistake.

Scaling out — predetermined targets

Scale out at predetermined R-multiple targets. Standard Stage 2: half off at +1.5R, half off at +3R, with stop trailed to break-even after first scale-out. This protects locked-in profit while letting the runner play out. Pre-commit the targets; don't scale out at random points based on feel.

Time stops — calibrated to setup data

Time stop: maximum holding period beyond which the trade is closed regardless of P&L. Calibrate to typical winning-trade hold time, doubled. If winning trades on Setup #1 typically resolve within 5 days, time stop is at 10 days. The doubling provides slack for unusual but valid trades while cutting off long-tail non-events.

Trailing stops — structural or ATR

Two methods. Structural: move stop below most recent N-bar swing low (longs). Updates only when new structural low forms. Robust; rarely whipsaws. ATR: stop at close minus 2×ATR. Updates daily. More dynamic; more whipsaws but stays tighter. Pick one method per setup; don't switch mid-trade. Don't trail until at least 1R of profit is banked.

Re-entries — disciplined rules

Re-entry allowed only when original setup conditions re-fire AND the prior exit wasn't a stop-loss hit. If the original stop was hit, wait for either next trading day or a structural higher-low (whichever later). Trade-day re-entry budget: 1 per setup per day. Prevents the death spiral of stop-out, re-enter, stop-out, re-enter.

FAQs

Should I always scale in/out, or trade single-entry-single-exit?

Pick deliberately per setup. For some setups, single-entry-single-exit is cleaner. For others, scaling adds modest improvement. What matters is that the choice is documented in the playbook, not ad-hoc.

How tight should my trailing stop be?

Method-dependent. Structural trailing: as wide as the most recent swing low + 0.25 ATR buffer. ATR trailing: 2× ATR is the standard. Tighter than 1× ATR almost always whipsaws.

What if my time stop hits while in profit?

Take profit at market. Time stops apply regardless of P&L direction. Allowing exceptions in profit ends in allowing exceptions in losses too — the discipline collapses.

Is averaging down ever acceptable?

Not at Stage 2. Stage 4+ systematic strategies sometimes incorporate it explicitly with rigorous risk control. Discretionary averaging-down at Stage 2 is structurally a discipline failure.

How do I track scaling outcomes vs single-entry outcomes?

Tag each trade in your journal with the management mode used. Compute expectancy separately for each mode after 30+ trades. Stage 2 weekly review covers this.

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Bharath Shiksha is an educational publisher. We do not provide investment advice. Curriculum uses anonymised historical examples with at least 30-day data lag; no specific securities are named for buy/sell/hold; no performance claims or return projections.