Making money in futures trading hinges upon how well you walk the fine line between risk and reward. On paper, it sounds easy ― simply cut off losers and let winners ride ― right? Well, as any veteran of the markets will tell you, trade management may be the single most challenging aspect of active trading.
Fortunately, there is a wide array of strategies that help take the guesswork out of open position management. Trailing stops and dollar-cost averaging are two of the most popular methods. One particularly useful way of optimizing performance is through the implementation of multi-bracket orders. Multi-brackets furnish the trader with the luxury of incorporating more than one profit target or stop loss into a single trade. In a way, multi-bracket orders let you have your cake and eat it too.
When it comes to successfully implementing a futures trading strategy, identifying opportunity, risk, and potential reward are only part of the job. Capitalizing upon strong setups via efficient trade execution drives profitability. Multi-brackets help complete this task by automatically placing profit targets and stop losses upon the market in adherence to almost any desired parameter.
In practice, a multi-bracket order is an order-cancels-order (OCO) that combines a series of profit targets and stop losses for positions of more than 1 contract. Upon a new position being opened at market, the multi-bracket’s OCO functionality ensures the position is closed out when either the profit target(s) or stop loss is hit.
Any trades are educational examples only. They do not include commissions and fees.
The beauty of multi-brackets is their flexibility. They may be applied in a vast number of ways, limited only by the imagination of the trader. Below are a few applications that prove especially useful in futures trading:
A big advantage of implementing multi-brackets is that they are fully automated. Upon the entry order being placed at market, the software trading platform does the rest. In addition to locating profit targets/stop losses, each is moved seamlessly without trader intervention. This greatly reduces latencies and promotes efficient, disciplined futures trading.
Perhaps the most attractive aspect of multi-bracket orders is usability. Given a robust software trading platform, the advanced applications of multi-brackets are easily adapted to almost any futures trading strategy.