Essential for this strategy are narrow spreads. By using our platform, you can
easily increase your profit by 10% - 25%. Trading
successfully is by no means a simple matter. It requires time, market knowledge
and market understanding and a large amount of self restraint.
Anyone who
says you can consistently make money in foreign exchange markets is being
untruthful. Foreign exchange by nature, is a volatile market. The practice of
trading it by way of margin increases that volatility exponentially. We are
therefore talking about a very 'fast market' which is naturally inconsistent.
Following that precept, it is logical to say that in order to make a successful
trade, a trader has to take into account technical and fundamental data and make
an informed decision based on his perception of market sentiment and market
expectation. Timing a trade correctly is probably the most important variable in
trading successfully but invariably there will be times where a traders' timing
will be off. Don't expect to generate returns on every trade.
Let's
enumerate what a trader needs to do in order to put the best chances for
profitable trades on his side:
Trade with money you can afford to
lose: Trading fx markets is speculative and can result in loss, it is also
exciting, exhilarating and can be addictive. The more you are 'involved with
your money' the harder it is to make a clear-headed decision. Money you have
earned is precious, but money you need to survive should never be
traded.
Identify the state of the market: What is the market
doing? Is it trending upwards, downwards, is it in a trading range. Is the trend
strong or weak, did it begin long ago or does it look like a new trend that's
forming. Getting a clear picture of the market situation is laying the
groundwork for a successful trade.
Determine what time frame you're
trading on: Many traders get in the market without thinking when they would
like to get out, after all the goal is to make money. This is true but when
trading, one must extrapolate in his mind's eye the movement that one expects to
happen. Within this extrapolation, resides a price evolution during a certain
period of time. Attached to this is the idea of exit price. The importance of
this is to mentally put your trade in perspective and although it is clearly
impossible to know exactly when you will exit the market, it is important to
define from the outset if you'll be trading intra-day, or going longer term.
This will also determine what chart period you're looking at. If you trade many
times a day, there's no point basing your technical analysis on a daily graph,
you'll probably want to analyse 30 minute or hour graphs. Additionally it is
important to know the different time periods when various financial centers
enter and exit the market as this creates more or less volatility and liquidity
and can influence market movements.
Time your trade: You can be
right about a potential market movement but be too early or too late when you
enter the trade. Timing considerations are twofold, an expected market figure
like CPI, retail sales or a federal reserve decision can consolidate a movement
that's already underway. Timing your move means knowing what's expected and
taking into account all considerations before trading. Technical analysis can
help you identify when and at what price a move may occur.
If in
doubt, stay out: If you're unsure about a trade and find you're hesitating,
stay on the sidelines.
Trade logical transaction sizes: Margin
trading allows the fx trader a very large amount of leverage, trading at full
margin capacity can make for some very large profits or losses on an account.
Scaling your trades so that you may re-enter the market or make transactions on
other currencies is generally wiser. In short, don't trade amounts that can
potentially wipe you out and don't put all your eggs in one basket. We offer the
same rates regardless of transaction sizes so a customer has nothing to lose by
starting small.
Gauge market sentiment: Market sentiment is what
most of the market is perceived to be feeling about the market and therefore
what it is doing or will do. This is basically about trend. You may have heard
the term 'the trend is your friend', this basically means that if you're in the
right direction with a strong trend you will make successful trades. This of
course is very simplistic, a trend is capable of reversal at any time. Technical
and fundamental data can indicate however if the trend has begun long ago and if
it is strong or weak.
Market expectation: Market expection relates
to what most people are expecting as far as upcoming news is concerned. If
people are expecting an interest rate to rise and it does, then there usually
will not be much of a movement because the information will already have been
'discounted' by the market, alternatively if the adverse happens, markets will
usually react violently.
Use what other traders use: In a
perfect world, every trader would be looking at a 14 day RSI and making trading
decisions based on that. If that was the case, when RSI would go under the 30
level, everyone would buy and by consequence the price would rise. Needless to
say, the world is not perfect and not all market participants follow the same
technical indicators, draw the same trendlines and identify the same support and
resistance levels. The great diversity of opinions and techniques used
translates directly into price diversity. Traders however have a tendency to use
a limited variety of technical tools. The most common are 9 and 14 day RSI,
obvious trendlines and support levels, fibonnacci retracement, MACD and 9, 20
and 40 day exponential moving averages. The closer you get to what most traders
are looking at, the more precise your estimations will be. The reason for this
is simple arithmetic, larger numbers of buyers than sellers at a certain price
will move the market up from that price and vice-versa.
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