BitBrokerTrade
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  • BitBrokerTrade
  • Exchange
    • What is an Exchange?
    • Connect Bitstamp
    • Connect Bitvavo
    • Connect Binance
    • Connect Coinbase advanced
    • Connect Bybit
    • Connect Kucoin
    • Connect Simulator
  • Traders
    • What is a Trader
    • Configurate Trader
    • Trader settings explained
  • FAQ
    • Explanation functionalities
      • Binance API management update
      • Binance API management update II
      • How does the application choose its language?
      • What is the difference between Updown strategy and BitBrokerTrade strategy?
      • How does the UpDown Strategy work
      • How much influence does the level of the return percentage have on the final profit?
      • What is the best return percentage to enter with the trader
      • How and on the basis of which you determine a 'ceiling rate'
      • How is the size of a transaction determined?
      • What is the minimum deposit amount in Euro
      • Exchange: amount reserved
      • Trader setting: Maximum open purchases
      • How does the calculation of the profit work?
      • Can I also try out the operation of the trader first without having to bring in money?
      • The dashboard shows the gross profit, but how do I calculate the net profit?
      • My dashboard suddenly shows a lower profit
    • Error messages
      • An open position but not enough crypto balance on the exchange
      • There are extremely high trading costs on a number of sales transactions
      • The trader does not make any purchases, what goes wrong?
      • My transaction line in the Purchase transactions screen has a red cross status ?!
      • Why does the sale of my BNB transaction give an error?
      • Dashboard data does not match historical transaction history
      • The transaction is not sold while the profit percentage has been achieved
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  1. Traders

Trader settings explained

PreviousConfigurate TraderNextFAQ

Last updated 2 years ago

Edit trader

Name Give your trader a name. This name is used by the dashboard in your overviews.

Exchange Choose the exchange to which you want to link the trader.

Market Choose the currency the trader should trade with.

Trading strategy Choose the strategy to follow:

Bitbrokertrade follows a price trend (MACD) and only makes a purchase if the price trend turns from falling to rising. The strategy only sells when the price trend reverses from rising to falling. BitBrokerTrade strategy trades with candles of 15 minutes, which means that a buying or selling moment can only be generated once every 15 minutes. See also our YouTube channel for an explanation.

Updown strategy trades with 1 minute candles and does not follow a price trend calculation. A rate is determined every minute. If this price is higher than the previous minute, then it is a buying moment. If the price is lower than the previous minute, it is a selling moment. The other trader settings determine whether there is really buying or selling.

Buying

Minimum percentage between trades This setting indicates how much exchange rate difference there should be between the individual purchases. Simulations show that a high percentage (default setting = 6%) prevents unnecessarily many positions being taken in a declining market. In a sideways and rising market, that high percentage has no adverse effect.

Stop purchases above If you do not want to buy above a certain price, enter the price ceiling here. How do you do that: In preparation, you look at the current price and the historical price development of the crypto currency in question. If YOUR expectation is or you have the feeling that the price of, for example, Bitcoin above a certain amount is a one-time peak, then you do not want the trader to buy positions if the price rises to that level. You then specify a price ceiling of 3% below that as a price ceiling. If your return is now set lower than 3%, the trader will always sell his last purchase at such a peak price and you have maximum return. That is the theory behind the ceiling price.

Average purchase amount Normally the trader buys 18% of your free euro balance as a position. If you have 1,000 euros available, the first purchase is therefore 180 euros. If you think these amounts are too high or too low, you can enter the desired amount here that the trader is allowed to purchase. For example € 200. The trader then always buys equal amounts of 200 euros. The minimum transaction size is €25.

Maximum open purchases You can specify per trader that a maximum number of positions may be open for the relevant coin. In combination with the average purchase amount, you can therefore set a precise limit on how much money you want to invest per coin. You can also use this option to instruct the trader to sell a coin 'empty' without making new purchases by entering a 'zero'. The trader will still sell, but will no longer make new purchases.

Selling

Minimum profit percentage The trader uses this percentage to judge when to sell a position. If a sell signal is generated from the chosen strategy, each trader individually checks whether the signal applies to him. This percentage must therefore be high enough to make a profit. If you enter 5%, the trader will make relatively few trades. After all, price fluctuations of 5% are less frequent. If you enter 1% here, you will benefit from a larger volume of transactions and you may even have a better total return. Keep in mind that almost all exchanges charge 0.25% buying and 0.25% selling costs. So that means that you only really make a profit from a return percentage of 0.5%.

Profit strategy (coming soon) You can choose between "Reinvest" and "HODL" here Reinvest means that if your position is sold, the full amount will be returned to your euro balance and will be used again to take up new positions. HODL means that when the position is sold, only the original purchase amount is converted into euros. The profit on the position remains in the cryptocurrency.

Stop loss percentage (coming soon) The stop loss function is a kind of emergency brake. Here you enter the percentage of loss at which you no longer want to hold the position. Once the negative return on the position reaches this percentage, the trader takes a loss and sells the position. Note: We provide this feature because users request it. In all tests on historical data (up to 12 months ago), this function ensures a much lower profitability, and often even a loss on your total investment.