 Please, stop moving your stops. I mean, we've all done it because we don't like losing or because we fear the market's going to finally reverse just after stopping us out. But these are emotionally driven decisions. And anytime in trading, when you take action based on emotions, it's usually the wrong action. Moving your stop is a sign that you don't really have a trading plan. Along with your entry and your target, your backtesting should define an invalidation point when you know your trade is wrong. Stops can be price-based, volume-based, or even time-based. You can also have liquidity-based stops using bookmaps heatmap or use our stops indicator that shows you where other players are getting stopped out. The main thing here is that your stop is easily defined and consistent because without consistency, you're backtesting a random data set and your results and conclusions will be meaningless.