Exit Strategies
Last updated
Last updated
Padre advanced Exit Strategies enable users to automate trade exits based on predefined conditions. This feature offers flexibility, allowing you to manage exits based on profit and loss thresholds.
It's available for both Market Buy and Buy Dip Limit Orders - ideal for adapting to various trading strategies. Once you place a market or limit buy with this feature enabled, the exit strategy values you set will be implemented.
When placing an order, enable the Exit Strategy checkbox to activate the configuration panel.
You can define up to five individual exit conditions, each consisting of:
Trigger type – TP (Take Profit) or SL (Stop Loss)
Price change – the percentage change (positive for TP, negative for SL) that will trigger the sell
Amount – the percentage of your total position to be sold if the trigger is reached
Each condition is executed independently. For example:
TP +20%, 30% amount → sells 30% of your position if the price increases by 20%
SL -10%, 40% amount → sells 40% if the price drops by 10%
You may configure any combination of TP and SL conditions - up to 5 individual orders. You can leave part of the position unallocated or include overlapping conditions.
Once the order is placed, the defined exit strategy is applied automatically.
Exit orders are submitted as market sells at the time conditions are met.
Exit strategies are only applied to the specific buy order they are configured with.
You can review or modify exit settings before placing the order. After confirmation, they cannot be edited.
Sell Initials is a one-click sell option on Solana that lets you instantly recover your initial investment, selling just enough to break even while keeping the rest of the position. You can only sell initials when you're in profit.
Example:
You buy a token for 1 SOL
Price increases +100%
You click Sell Init
Padre sells approximately 50% of your tokens (worth 1 SOL)
You now hold the remaining tokens entirely in profit
You need to be in profit in order to sell initials. If the market price drops below your entry, your holding won't be able to cover the initial investment.