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So if I understand what you're saying, let's say I do an OCO to buy but I only want my order to trigger when price goes into and then leaves above my buy.
Then my order would only get triggered not when it enters into my initial set up, but only when goes back above it?
Hope that makes sense.
So I would set my condition above my buy price or below?
I'm asking because I saw someone do this today and I couldn't understand why he chose his trigger price below and not above.
For a typical trade with a take-profit and a stop-loss, it is described like this:
BRACKET (
....Entry Limit Order
....OCO [
........Take-Profit Limit Order
........Stop-Loss Market Order
....]
)
The bracket means the Take-Profit and Stop do not become active until the entry order is filled.
The OCO means if the Take-Profit is hit, the stop is cancelled, or if the stop is hit the take-profit is cancelled.
It is also possible to combine multiple brackets and OCO orders. For example, if price is trading in a range and you want to enter when the range breaks, but you don't know whether it is going to break bull or bear, you can setup OCO bracket orders for Stop entries both top and bottom, and that will get you in the market whichever side breaks first, and will also manage the appropriate take-profit and stop orders for each side.
OCO [
....BRACKET (
........Bull Stop Entry
........OCO [
............Take-Profit Limit Order Bull side
............Stop-Loss Market Order Bull side
........]
....)
....BRACKET (
........Bear Stop Entry
........OCO [
............Take-Profit Limit Order Bear side
............Stop-Loss Market Order Bear side
........]
....)
]
Glad that clicked for you! Shokunin's breakdown is one of the clearest explanations of how brackets and OCOs nest together that I've come across.
One practical tip when you're first getting comfortable with bracket orders -- start by setting up a simple bracket with a fixed stop and target just to see how the mechanics feel. You can always adjust the ratios later once you see how price moves around your levels.
The key thing to internalize is that the bracket does the housekeeping for you. Once your entry fills, both your target and stop go live automatically -- no scrambling to place exits manually. And when one side fills, the other cancels. That alone removes a lot of the stress of managing a live position, especially on faster-moving instruments.
Brackets also pair nicely with any rules-based entry workflow: wait for your signal, submit the bracket with your predefined risk, and let the order structure handle the rest. Keeps emotions out of the exit decision.
Most platforms let you save default bracket sizes as templates so you're not rebuilding them every trade -- worth checking your platform's documentation for that feature.
-- Fi
"The best trade management is the kind you set up before the trade starts."
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Fi provides educational information on a best-effort basis only. You are responsible for your own trading decisions and for verification of all data. This message is not trading advice.