When to Break Your Own Rules (And When to Follow Them Religiously)

Profit Target Strategies: Taking Money Off the Table

SL/TP Intelligence Series. Article 5 of 8

The Exit Problem

Everyone focuses on entries. “Where should I buy?” “What’s the perfect setup?” “Which indicator gives the best signal?”

But here’s the truth: You don’t make money entering. You make money exiting.

A great entry with a poor exit is a losing trade. A mediocre entry with a masterful exit is profitable. The exit is where profit is realized. or lost.

And yet, most traders spend 90% of their energy on entries and 10% on exits. This is backwards.

The Psychology of Profit-Taking

Before discussing strategies, understand why exits are hard:

Fear of Missing Out (FOMO): Price is moving in your favor. You see bigger gains possible. So you hold. And hold. Until the move reverses and your profit evaporates.

Greed: “It’s going higher. I just know it.” The market doesn’t care what you know. It moves how it moves.

Hope: “It’ll come back. It always comes back.” Sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it comes back after you’ve given back all your gains.

Ego: “I called this move perfectly. I’m going to capture the whole thing.” The market humbles egos.

The professional knows: Partial profits are better than full reversals. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.

Strategy 1: The Static Target

Concept: Set a target before entering. When price hits it, exit completely.

How to determine the target:

  • Previous support/resistance levels
  • Fibonacci extensions
  • Measured moves (pattern projections)
  • Risk-to-reward ratio requirements
  • Example:

  • Entry: $50
  • Stop: $48 (2% risk)
  • Target: $54 (2:1 reward)
  • Exit entirely at $54
  • Pros:

  • Simple to execute
  • No decision-making under pressure
  • Defined risk-to-reward before entry
  • Ideal for mean reversion strategies
  • Cons:

  • Miss extended moves
  • No flexibility for changing conditions
  • Can exit just before major continuation
  • Best for: Beginners, mean reversion traders, strict risk managers

    Strategy 2: The Tiered Exit (Partial Profits)

    Concept: Scale out of positions at predetermined levels. Capture some profit early, let the rest run.

    Common approaches:

    50/50 Split

  • Close 50% at 1:1 reward
  • Close 50% at 2:1 reward (or trailing stop)
  • Thirds

  • Close 1/3 at 1:1
  • Close 1/3 at 2:1
  • Let 1/3 run with trailing stop
  • Quartering

  • Close 25% at breakeven
  • Close 25% at 1:1
  • Close 25% at 2:1
  • Let 25% run
  • Example (Thirds):

  • Entry: $100
  • Position: 300 shares
  • Stop: $98
  • Execution:

  • Sell 100 shares at $102 (1:1)
  • Sell 100 shares at $104 (2:1)
  • Trail stop on remaining 100 shares
  • Pros:

  • Guarantees some profit
  • Reduces risk as trade progresses
  • Allows participation in extended moves
  • Psychologically easier (already won)
  • Cons:

  • Smaller position on big winners
  • More complex execution
  • Requires discipline to follow plan
  • Best for: Trend followers, swing traders, those struggling with all-or-nothing psychology

    Strategy 3: The Trailing Target

    Concept: Let winners run using technical levels as dynamic targets.

    Implementation:

    Moving Averages

  • Exit when price closes below 20 EMA (longs)
  • Exit when price closes above 20 EMA (shorts)
  • Trend Lines

  • Exit when trend line breaks
  • Adjust trend line as price progresses
  • Parabolic SAR

  • Automatic trailing stop system
  • Flip signals exit
  • Chandelier Exit

  • Based on ATR
  • Trails below highest high since entry
  • Example:

  • Entry: $50
  • Trail: Below 20 EMA
  • As price moves to $60, 20 EMA rises to $56
  • Exit when price closes below $56
  • Pros:

  • Captures extended trends
  • Adapts to market conditions
  • Removes guesswork
  • Mathematically objective
  • Cons:

  • Gives back some profit on reversals
  • Can exit early in volatile trends
  • Requires trend to be established
  • Best for: Trend followers, position traders, those with patience

    Strategy 4: The Time-Based Exit

    Concept: Exit based on time, not just price. If the trade hasn’t worked within X period, assume the edge is gone.

    Implementation:

    Swing Trading

  • If trade hasn’t hit target or stop in 5 days, exit
  • Edge decays over time for swing setups
  • Day Trading

  • Exit by 3:30 PM if still open
  • Avoid overnight risk
  • End-of-day volatility
  • Event-Based

  • Exit before earnings
  • Exit before major announcements
  • Exit before weekends (for day traders)
  • Example:

  • Entry: Monday morning
  • Expectation: Move within 3 days
  • Friday close: Neither target nor stop hit
  • Exit and redeploy capital
  • Pros:

  • Prevents “hope mode”
  • Frees capital for better setups
  • Opportunity cost management
  • Forces discipline
  • Cons:

  • May exit just before move happens
  • Requires accurate time expectations
  • Can cut winners too early
  • Best for: Active traders, those prone to overholding, high-opportunity environments

    Strategy 5: The Confluence Exit

    Concept: Exit when multiple factors align against your position. not just one.

    Example confluence factors:

  • Price hits target level
  • AND momentum diverges
  • AND volume decreases
  • AND sector shows weakness
  • Why it works: Single factors can give false signals. Confluence increases probability that the move is ending.

    Example:

  • Long position, target $100
  • Price hits $100
  • RSI shows bearish divergence
  • Volume lower than previous high
  • Leading sector ETF breaking down
  • Exit signal confirmed
  • Pros:

  • Higher probability exits
  • Filters out noise
  • Aligns with confluence entry philosophy
  • Professional-grade approach
  • Cons:

  • Complex to monitor
  • May exit after some reversal
  • Requires multiple tools/indicators
  • Best for: Advanced traders, those with sophisticated analysis tools

    Strategy 6: The Psychological Exit

    Concept: Exit based on your psychological state, not just price.

    Signs you should exit:

  • You can’t sleep because of the position
  • You’re checking the chart every 5 minutes
  • You’ve moved your stop three times
  • You’re rooting for the trade like a sports team
  • You’re sizing up how you’ll spend the profits
  • The rule: If the trade owns you, exit. Re-enter with clearer head if setup is still valid.

    Pros:

  • Prevents emotional disasters
  • Protects long-term psychology
  • Forces self-awareness
  • Cons:

  • Subjective
  • Can create overtrading
  • Requires honest self-assessment
  • Best for: Traders struggling with discipline, high-stress periods, oversized positions

    The Hybrid Approach

    Most professionals use combinations:

    Example hybrid strategy:

  • Scale out 1/3 at 1:1 (guarantee profit)
  • Scale out 1/3 at technical target (capture expected move)
  • Trail stop on final 1/3 (capture extended move)
  • Time limit: 5 days (opportunity cost)
  • Psychological check: If stressed, close remaining
  • This combines:

  • Static targets (discipline)
  • Partial profits (psychology)
  • Trailing stops (trend capture)
  • Time limits (opportunity cost)
  • Self-awareness (emotional management)
  • Common Exit Mistakes

    Mistake #1: No Target

    Entering without knowing where you’ll exit. Result: Emotional decisions, random exits, inconsistent results.

    Mistake #2: Moving Targets

    “It’ll go higher. I’ll just move my target up.” Result: Never taking profit, giving back gains, eventual reversal.

    Mistake #3: Target Too Far

    Setting targets based on hope, not structure. Result: Frequent misses, frustration, system abandonment.

    Mistake #4: Target Too Close

    Fear-based tight targets. Result: Constant small profits that don’t cover losses, death by fees.

    Mistake #5: Changing Strategy Mid-Trade

    “I said I’d trail, but now I’ll take static.” Result: Worst of both worlds, no consistency.

    The Professional Exit Checklist

    Before entering, define:

  • [ ] Primary target (where does thesis complete?)
  • [ ] Secondary target (if trend continues?)
  • [ ] Trailing stop trigger (when does it activate?)
  • [ ] Time limit (how long will I give this?)
  • [ ] Partial exit levels (if using tiered approach)
  • [ ] Psychological limits (when will I override?)
  • Write it down. Trade the plan.

    The Reality Check

    You’ll never capture the exact top or bottom. Chasing perfect exits leads to:

  • Overtrading
  • Stress
  • System abandonment
  • Inconsistent results
  • The goal: Capture enough of the move to be profitable, consistently, over time.

    A strategy that captures 60% of the move every time beats a strategy that sometimes captures 100% but mostly captures reversals.

    Bottom Line

    Entries get you into trades. Exits determine your profitability.

    Choose an exit strategy that matches:

  • Your trading style (trend vs. mean reversion)
  • Your psychological profile (patience vs. need for action)
  • Your market environment (trending vs. ranging)
  • Your risk tolerance (all-or-nothing vs. steady)
  • Then execute it. Without deviation. Without emotion. Trade after trade.

    The exit is where the money is made.

    Series Preview

    Next in SL/TP Intelligence:

  • The Psychology of Letting Winners Run: Why it’s so hard
  • Advanced Exit Strategies: Partial exits, scaling, and more
  • The Pre-Trade Checklist: Putting it all together
  • Perfect exits don’t exist. Consistent exits build wealth.

    Look first, then leap.

    . The Titanprotect Team

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