Friday, 15 November 2013

A Simple Strategy For Ranging Markets

  • Traders should have a plan of action, when Forex trends end.
  • Identify trading ranges by pinpointing swing highs and lows.
  • Oscillators such as RSI can use overbought and oversold levels for market entries.
  •  
    One rule that should be followed by every trader is to find a trading plan and stick with it. However, any experienced trader knows that they must remain flexible because the market isn’t always trending and moving in a singular direction! So what is a trader to do when some of the Forex markets most frequently traded pairs don’t have an established trend?

    The answer itself is quite simple. When the market gives you a range, trade ranges! When markets are moving sideways, it can be easy to adapt one of your trending market strategies to present conditions. Often trending market traders will look to use indicators such as CCI, RSI, or MACD in conjuncture with support and resistance lines to trade market swings. The same philosophy can be used while range trading if you know what to look for.

    Learn Forex – EURCHF Daily Range
    A_Simple_Strategy_For_Ranging_Markets_body_Picture_1.png, A Simple Strategy For Ranging Markets
    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    Above we can see the EURCHF currency pair which has been locked in a trading range since the month of June. The range itself can be identified by moving from left to right on your chart and marking a series swing highs and swing lows. If price appears to be moving in a horizontal line you have probably identified a trading range. Any easy litmus test for a range is to determine if prices are heading higher or lower on your chart. If you find yourself debating if a chart is trending up or down, odds are your graph is trading in a range!

    Now that a range has been identified, let’s look at a plan for trading the market.

    Learn Forex – EURCHF RSI Signals
    A_Simple_Strategy_For_Ranging_Markets_body_Picture_3.png, A Simple Strategy For Ranging Markets
    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    Above, we can now see an 8Hour EURCHF chart in conjuncture with the RSI (Relative Strength Index) indicator. When trading a range, traders can look to use RSI's overbought and oversold levels to determine where to enter the market. Unlike trend traders, range traders do have the ability to trade both sides of the market. This means range traders will look for both buying and selling opportunities.

    To sell range traders can trigger orders when price moves off resistance and RSI crosses back below a reading of 70. As momentum returns price lower, traders can focus their targets near the support zone. Price moving towards support will also allow traders to initiate new buy positions. Traders will look to buy in a range as price bounces off support and RSI moves back over an RSI reading of 30. Pricing targets for buy orders will then focus on levels near resistance.
    While the EURCHF is not currently trading at support or resistance, traders will wait patiently for the next decline or advance before entering into the market.

    Managing Risk

    Every strategy needs to have a plan for managing risk. Just like trends, ranges can abruptly come to an end and traders need to be prepared for that scenario. When trading ranges, stops should be kept out of the identified levels of support and resistance. If the event that price breaks above resistance or declines bellow support, the range should be considered invalidated. At that point, range traders should exit any existing positions and look for other trading options.
     

    Thursday, 14 November 2013

    A Simple Way To Trade RSI

  • Every trader should have a method of identifying potential Forex trades.
  • Identify Swing highs and lows to find the trend.
  • RSI overbought and oversold levels can be used for market entries.

  • Every trader needs a plan of action when approaching the Forex market. However, with so many strategy choices it can be difficult for a beginner to identify and then execute a proper trading strategy. Today we are going to review the basics of a simple RSI strategy, based on finding the trend then utilizing an oscillating indicator for timing market execution.

    Identify the Trend

    The first step to trading any successful trend based strategy is to find the trend! One of easiest ways to find the trend is through identifying a charts swing highs and swing lows. Traders can work from left to right on their graph and identify the outliers in price. If you see the peaks and valleys of price declining consistently, you are looking at a downtrend. If highs and lows are advancing, traders would consider a currency pair to be trending upward.

    Given this information, traders should look to sell the AUDNZD as long as price continues to decline towards lower lows. If the trend continues, expectations are that price will decline allowing traders to look for new areas to sell the market.

    Learn Forex – AUDNZD Trend
    A_Simple_Way_To_Trade_RSI_body_Picture_2.png, A Simple Way To Trade RSI
    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    RSI for Entry

    Once a strong trend is established, traders will look to join that trend with a technical market trigger. Oscillators are a family of indicators that are designed specifically to determine if momentum is returning to an existing trend. Below we can again see the AUDNZD 8 Hour chart, but this time the RSI (Relative Strength Index) indicator has been added. Since we have identified the AUDNZD as being in a downtrend, traders will look to sell the pair when the RSI indicator crosses back below a value of 70 (overbought). This will signal momentum returning lower after the creation of a new swing high.

    Below you will find several previous examples of RSI entries signaled on the AUDNZD. Remember since the trend is down, only new sell positions should be initiated. At no point should a buy position be considered as price declines.

    Learn Forex – AUDNZD & RSI
    A_Simple_Way_To_Trade_RSI_body_Picture_1.png, A Simple Way To Trade RSI
    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    Manage Risk

    Every good strategy needs a risk management component. When trading strong trends such as the AUDNZD, it is important to realize that they will eventually come to an end! Traders have a variety of choices when it comes to stop placement, but one of the easiest methods is to use a previous swing high on the chart. In the event that price breaks towards higher highs, traders will wish to exit any existing sell biased positions and look for new opportunities elsewhere.

    Wether you are trading live money or just practicing on a demo it is also recomended to review your trades. This way you can track your progress while making sure you adhere to the strategy rules!
     

    How to Adopt a Positive Trading Mentality

  • The trader’s psychology plays a huge role in success in markets
  • Traders have to first learn to lose properly before they can focus on winning
  • A positive outlook can be the difference between failure and success in markets

  • Learning to trade is like anything else in life where experience is often the best educator. It takes time to get where you want to be as a trader.

    Making matters more difficult is the fact that failure is pretty much a guaranteed thing, at least some of the time. Just as we saw in How to Lose Properly, traders have to face the fact that they will, at least some of the time, be wrong. And if those losses are left unchecked, they can more than eat up the gains of numerous winners.

    This is The Number One Mistake Forex Traders Make; and this is something that we can all fix by adopting the right mindset, and sticking to our plans.
    How_to_Adopt_a_Positive_Trading_Mentality_body_Picture_4.png, How to Adopt a Positive Trading Mentality
    You have to read between the lines

    In most things we do in life, if you want to denote success you look at the number of times that you’re right versus the number of times that you’re wrong. And in general, a marker of 50% is that ‘line-in-the-sand’ between failure and success.

    Why 50%? Well, likely it’s because of simplicity. It means you won more often than you lost; which could be a very, very rudimentary manner of grading success.

    In trading, this couldn't be more misleading. This is just like we saw in The Number One Mistake: In many cases, traders won well over half the time… like in GBPJPY, traders won 66% of the time.
     
    How_to_Adopt_a_Positive_Trading_Mentality_body_Picture_5.png, How to Adopt a Positive Trading Mentality
    Taken from The Number One Mistake Forex Traders Make, highlighting GBPJPY

    So, if we take a 66% winning percentage in GBPJPY and apply the rudimentary logic in which 50% success rate was the determinant between success and failure; we’d be misled pretty badly.

    Because these traders in GBPJPY, despite winning nearly two out of every three trades, still lost money…

    It’s because they were SO wrong in their losses, and not ‘very right’ in their wins.
    The biggest winning percentages can be made worthless with large losses
    How_to_Adopt_a_Positive_Trading_Mentality_body_Picture_4.png, How to Adopt a Positive Trading Mentality
    Taken from The Number One Mistake Forex Traders Make, highlighting GBPJPY

    But if you think about it, this is really just default human nature. Think about the last time you woke up in the morning, opened your platform, and saw an overnight loss of 200 pips staring you in the face.

    First, you probably felt a small punch to the stomach; this is natural.

    Then, you probably started trying to rationalize with yourself. “Well, it can come back. Maybe I’ll just give it a little more room to work.”

    Later, after this didn’t work you, you begin bargaining: “Well, if this comes back to my entry price I’ll close it out… and I’ll never trade without a stop again!”

    This is an example of being greedy, when you should probably have been afraid. This trade showed you a loss; and the analysis that put you into the position in the first place is obviously no longer valid.

    So, just because you opened the position 200 pips ago, you have to make those pips back in that single trade?

    This one may come back. And the next one might even come back to your entry price, too. But eventually, one of those trades is going to get away from you.

    And just like that, one trade obliterates your account.

    Let’s look at the other side of the coin. Let’s say that you wake up in the morning, and you see your trade placed last night is up 50 pips. This is one of those little ‘oh ya!’ moments that you get in the morning in which you’re probably too tired to do anything; but it still feels good none-the-less.

    But, as you think about it – you don’t like the idea of giving up this 50 pip profit. After all, markets can be chaotic, and these 50 pips can go away just as easily as they collected. ‘What the heck, nobody ever went broke taking profits, right?’

    This is fear. This is fear when you should be, in fact, greedy. This trade has shown you that you’re right, why would you want to cut the gain short?

    Certainly, there is the chance that the position can come back to haunt you, but once again – we’re playing probabilities here, and this is one of those situations that you’re winning! This is when you want to be greedy.

    How_to_Adopt_a_Positive_Trading_Mentality_body_Picture_1.png, How to Adopt a Positive Trading Mentality
    The Importance of Positivity

    Trading involves forecasting future price movements in an effort to make money off those predictions. You can use something like the strategy we outlined in The Potent Combination of Fundamentals and Price Action to get the probabilities on your side as much as possible... but the risk of failure is going to be part of every trade you take.

    There is just one problem: No human being can tell the future.

    The sooner you come to grips with that, the sooner you can start actually learning to trade. Coming to grips with this fact also allows you to take a positive mental approach to markets.

    Why beat yourself up just because you were wrong on a single forecast? Further, if you beat yourself up over getting one trade wrong, how do you think that will impact future trades?

    Likely, that negativity will persist. And if future trades end up failing, the negativity grows and gets worse. Eventually, trading isn’t fun anymore and you no longer want to do it.

    Don’t worry, this happens to everybody. This is usually the make-or-break moment in a trader’s career that determines whether or not they’re going to continue striving for profitability or whether they’ll look for greener pastures elsewhere.

    All because someone beats themselves up for not being able to tell the future!

    If trading profitably isn’t based around Prediction, then what?

    If you look at matters rationally, you have to admit that you will never be able to tell the future; which means that any individual trade can work against you and cost you money.

    Deductive logic then dictates that trading profitably is a numbers game; just like many other ventures in life in which probabilities dictate results.

    This is just like sales, or sports, or weather forecasting; anything in which ‘chance’ or probability plays a role. And just like any of those other areas of life, if you allow just one or two failures to ruin your frame-of-mind, you’re not going to be very good on subsequent attempts.

    So, you can’t allow yourself to get bogged down from the inevitable negativity that comes with losing. You have to adopt a more proactive way to look at markets.

    An easy way to look at the ‘sunny-side up’

    Each time you enter a trade, assume that you are going to lose.

    I know that this sounds funny; maybe even stupid or self-defeating. But after you’ve done this long enough, you can see the value in preparing yourself for the worst case scenario, and here’s why: Because you are going to see the worst case scenario. And if you aren’t expecting it, it’s like that shot of negativity that we mentioned above.

    Instead, if you assume the worst-case scenario right up front, this allows you to be pleasantly surprised a good amount of the time. And when you are pleasantly surprised, now you can do your job of actually trading the position by managing it.

    This does something else that's pretty important: It ensures that any loss you take in a position will be minimal. Because if you are looking at each trade as an expenditure of capital for a chance (and only a chance) to make more, you’ll likely be more conservative with that capital.

    When you enter a position, look at the amount you have risked as a sunk cost that is being paid for the opportunity to make money on that trade. The trade may work it, or it may not – but the amount you put up to risk is a cost of doing business in search of opportunities.

    The Small Business Owner Example

    The following analogy that many may be familiar with can be easily adapted to trading:

    You own a small clothing store and you’re looking to make a profit. Well, the first thing you’ve got to do is get some inventory, because you can’t sell ‘nothing,’ right?

    So, you have to spend some money to make some money, and you buy some inventory to sell at your store.

    Likely, some items will remain unsold, so some of what you bought will end up being unprofitable. But the garments that do sell are what allow you to pay your overhead, put some money in your pocket, and put food on the table; while allowing enough to re-invest in the business so you can move through the cycle all over again.

    Just like a small business owner, it is your job to find profitable opportunities. Some of those opportunities won’t work, and some will. But if you allow the ones that don’t work to affect you, you aren’t going to want to spend much time doing this.

    But looking at each trade as a simple opportunity, and assuming that each time you enter a trade that you are paying a ‘sunk cost’ for that opportunity, it can allow you to get much more enjoyment out of markets by being pleasantly surprised when you win, and shrugging off losses as just another opportunity that didn’t work out this time.

    This is business… and it’s just a numbers game.
     

    Wednesday, 13 November 2013

    How to Trade a Descending Triangle

    -Triangle price patterns can be used in Forex trading to identify potential breakout setups
    - Descending triangles form when a rising trend line and a horizontal support line converge
    - Traders can look for the breakout from the descending triangle to signal the continuation of the AUDJPY down move.
     
    Learn Forex: Descending Triangle
    How_to_Trade_a_Descending_Triangle_body_Picture_2.png, How to Trade a Descending Triangle
    What is a Descending Triangle pattern?

    A descending triangle pattern is consolidation price pattern composed of lower swing highs pushed lower by an established downtrend line converging with a horizontal support made up of a series of swing lows located in roughly the same area. Another name for the descending triangle is the right triangle pattern due to its similarity to the geometric shape of the same name. The height of the triangle meets the horizontal support at a 90 degree angle.

    Usually, descending triangles form as profit taking by sellers is met with bargain hunting buyers. However, the buying pressure is mutted as higher lows are not made. A news release or economic announcement could be the catalyst required to push price out of this coil tilting the balance strongly in the seller's favor. Unlike its cousins, the symmetrical triangle and ascending triangle, the descending lacks significant bullish participation indicated by that lack of higher lows.
     
    Learn Forex: AUDJPY Descending Triangle

    How_to_Trade_a_Descending_Triangle_body_Picture_1.png, How to Trade a Descending Triangle

    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    Charting AUDJPY

    Taking a look at the current AUDJPY 4-hour chart, you can clearly see price action bound between a descending trend line that connects the 11/6 swing high of 94.15 to 11/12 swing high of 93.05. This swing high is a lower swing high than the 11/10 93.19 swing high showing the building strength in the downtrend. Current price action within the triangle is below the 200 simple moving average (SMA), a key indicator that traders use to determine bullishness or bearishness.

    Traders will watch price action for a 4-hour candle close below support to confirm that there is follow through in a potential breakout. Stops can be placed near the middle of the triangle just above the 93.00 and 200 SMA. The height of the triangle is a little over 170 pips. By extending this height from the support level of a potential breakout zone, look for a possible target of 91.14. The profit target coincides with the lows seen back on October 2nd.

    In summary, descending triangles can be an excellent way to rejoin a downtrend that clearly illustrates risk and reward. Price has a tendency to break form the descending triangle in a downward direction.
     

    Tuesday, 12 November 2013

    A New Way of Thinking about Which Trades To Cut and Which to Keep

  • Trading Is Little Different Than Running A Business
  • Business Success is Built on Employee Retention and Termination
  • Trading Is a Game Built on Keeping Good Employees & Letting Go Of Bad Ones Quick

  • “Think about it this way: If you had to launch your business in two weeks, what would you cut out?” ― Jason Fried & David Heinemeier Hansson, ReWork

    When entering into a work force and meeting different companies you’ll often hear the phrase, “our biggest asset is our employees”. This is often warming to the fearful entrant into the workplace, however there is a flipside to this truth and that is that the wrong employee or worse, group of employees, can easily bring down a business. Understanding this simple fact can have a powerful and beneficial impact on your trading.

    Trading Is Little Different Than Running A Business
    Treating_Trades_Like_An_Employee_body_Picture_1.png, A New Way of Thinking about Which Trades To Cut and Which to Keep

    Throughout this article it may be helpful to think of your trading account as your own enterprise with you being the CEO behind a beautiful mahogany desk. As the CEO of your company it’s your job to make sure that every employee (i.e. open trade) on your payroll is pushing your business forward and that you’re not holding on to any employees that are holding you back.

    Why think this way?

    Trading is simple but that does not mean it’s easy. One way or another, your long term success as a trader will depend on your ability to fight the fight for trading survival by quickly cutting trades that are doing more harm than good and keeping trades open that are technically acting right within your analysis.

    Business Success is built on Employee Retention and Termination

    As the CEO of your own trading firm, you need to be able to cut the fat that is holding you back from reaching your goals. While companies know that it is expensive to hire, train, analyze and fire bad employees, they know that is a much cheaper alternative than holding onto said employee and hoping she or he is due for a bounce of good performance. Sadly, this is similar to what many traders do, where they hire a bad employee (trade) and once proven ineffective, they’d rather hold on hoping for a turnaround as opposed to cut the waste and look for another employee that can deliver the results they originally sought.

    Learn Forex: A Long EURUSD Employee May Be Ready For a Pink Slip
    Treating_Trades_Like_An_Employee_body_Picture_3.png, A New Way of Thinking about Which Trades To Cut and Which to Keep
    Presented by FXCM’s Marketscope Charts

    As a forex trader, you’ve probably learned or are still learning that markets are emotional and trading should be logical. From a logical point of view, if trading under the paradigm that this article recommends, then a long EURUSD position is no longer making business sense as EURUSD continues to break levels of support on a move lower. This is a simple illustration with a current chart to show you that EURUSD long is likely not helping further your businesses goal of long-term profitability.

    Trading Is a Game Built on Keeping Good Employees & Quickly Letting Go Of Bad Ones

    Just like its often painful for a company to layoff an employee that had so much promise at an interview, it’s tough for a trader to let go of a trade gone sour. Naturally, when you got into a trade, it likely had a good story behind it that made it easier to open the trade along with some excitement about potential property. But in the end, the p/l doesn’t lie and the only thing worse than a 5% loss is a 10% loss or more.

    This article begun with a quote from the book, Rework, that asks a prespective business owner what they would cut if they had to begin their business right away. This question is meant to adjust your mindset so that cutting the unnecessary portions of the business are easier to stomach. Of course, trading is a bit different than heading up a start-up. But like the quote challenges start-ups to ask them self, I encourage you to reflect on the following question:

    If you were going to raise outside capital to manage tomorrow or next week and had to show your open trades, which would you be embarrassed to show?

    Those are likely the trades holding you back that you should think about firing.
     

    Monday, 11 November 2013

    4 Steps to Trade the Diagonal Pattern

    Diagonal patterns are simple technical patterns that offer tight zones of entry and exit. Many times, the risk-to-reward ratio of the diagonal pattern will better than the 1-to-2 ratio.

    Diagonal patterns are one of my favorite patterns to trade because the method to trade them is fairly straight forward and you can identify clear risk and reward parameters. This piece will outline what a bullish diagonal looks like and how you set your entry and exit parameters for the potential trade.

    The Anatomy of a Bullish Diagonal
    4_Steps_to_Trade_the_Diagonal_Pattern_body_Picture_5.png, 4 Steps to Trade the Diagonal Pattern

    The ideal diagonal would consist of five waves. Each wave of the three waves to the downside would be smaller than the previous alternating wave. The alternating waves of the 5 wave move are waves 1, 3, and 5.

    For example, wave 5 would be smaller in length than wave 3. Wave 3 would be smaller in length than wave 1. So wave 3 would be smaller in length than wave 1.
    When you connect waves 2 and 4 with a trend line and connect waves 1 and 3 with a trend line, then you will notice a triangular type of drawing (see grey lines). This becomes the basis of the bullish diagonal pattern.

    This pattern tends to fool trend traders because it continues to produce lower highs and lower lows. Trend traders would see this as a bearish trend. However, there are a couple of clues that can tip us off that the trend is likely to correct or possibly reverse.
    1. Measure the waves – In the idealized pattern above, see how wave 5 is shorter than wave 3 while wave 3 is shorter than wave 1. This indicates the trend lower doesn’t have the strength it used to. Each subsequent push lower in price travels less distance than the previous leg. The trend has moved too far and too fast to the downside and is likely to correct upward.
    2. Look for simple indicator divergence – determine if divergence is showing up in the formation of wave 5. Divergence is another clue of a tiring trend and momentum is slowing to the downside. Absent a healthy correction to the upside, this pattern is losing momentum and at risk of a sharp move up.
    Another key point to consider is distinguishing the difference between an ending diagonal and a triangle. Triangles tend to move sideways as they consolidate a prior move. Diagonals tend to be directional.

    For example, see how both grey lines in the idealized chart above are both pointed down? This is what I mean by both lines are directional. You’ll see both trend lines point in the same direction in a diagonal. A triangle will see both trend lines pointed in different directions.

    Learn Forex: Ending Diagonal Trade Set Up
    4_Steps_to_Trade_the_Diagonal_Pattern_body_Picture_4.png, 4 Steps to Trade the Diagonal Pattern
    (Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

    As you can see in the above example, prices in the EURUSD were towards the end of an exhaustive move to the downside. Prices kept pushing lower and creating lower highs and lower lows. Trend traders may see that type of price action and jump into the trend to the downside. However, the length of wave 5 is less than the length of wave 3, and the length of wave 3 is smaller than wave 1 tipping us off that the trend is certainly slowing. Additionally, the RSI oscillator is flashing divergence as price reaches lower lows yet the oscillator fails to confirm lower lows. 
     
    Trading the Diagonal

    As wave 5 is taking shape or shortly after it is completed, we can begin setting up our trade. 
    1. Draw a trend line connecting the top of wave 2 and the top of wave 4
    2. Enter on a break above this trend line as a break indicates a high probability the low of wave 5 is in place
    3. Place your stop loss just below the swing low of wave 5
    4. Place your limit to take profit at the beginning of wave 1
    Many times, because the pattern is losing momentum to the downside, when prices finally turn bullish, it can be a swift correction to the upside.
    As you can see from the chart above, the risk-to-reward ratio on this trade would have been about 1-to-3 which is many times better than the 1-to-2 risk-to-reward ratio.

    Remember, this is simply a pattern to follow with buy and sell rules. Not all patterns and not all trades work out to be a winning trade. Therefore, it is important to be responsible to your account and use prudent risk management techniques such as trading in small sizes risking a small portion of your account. We suggest risking less than 5% of your account on ALL open trades.
     

    Saturday, 9 November 2013

    Tracking Your Forex Trading

  • Traders can track key statistics using the reporting feature.
  • Track your average profits to avoid the trader’s number one mistake.
  • Review trades by currency pair to identify the best times to trade.

  • Every trader should check in and review their past trading history from time to time. Businesses track their profit margins and bestselling products. So it’s only reasonable for traders to calculate their average profits and most profitable currency pairs.

    One of the ways traders, can organize their trades is through the use of a trading report. By consistently running a report and keeping just a few key statistics along the way, traders can identify what is working and what isn’t in their trading. Let’s get started by looking at how to run a trading report!


    Tracking_Your_Forex_Trading_body_Picture_1.png, Tracking Your Forex Trading

    Running A Report

    When a trader wants to review their trading, it is important to know how to run a report. To begin, traders using the FXCM Trading Station should find the report tab located at the top of their trading platform as depicted above. From here, a new pop up will prompt you with a few parameters necessary for completing your report.

    Reports can go back as far as the inception of your trading account (since open), so it is important to specify the “From” field. This will allow you to select the date your report will begin. The last parameter to select is the format menu. This selection allows you to choose how your report will be displayed on. The FXCM Trading Station allows you to run reports in HTML (web), XLS (Spreadsheet), or PDF (document) formats depending on your preference. Once all of your settings are set to your liking, click the “Run report” button on the bottom of the menu.

    Now just give your report a few seconds to compute, and you can begin analyzing your trade data!

    Tracking_Your_Forex_Trading_body_Picture_1.png, Tracking Your Forex Trading

    Tracking your Trading

    Now that you have your report up, you can begin to track your trading. This process can be made easier through the use of a spreadsheet, but you can track this information by hand as well. First, it is extremely important to check for your average profit relative to your average loss. This way you can ensure you are avoiding the trader’s number one mistake through the use of positive risk reward ratios. If you notice your average loss is great than your average profit, it may be time to reconsider your current trading plan.

    Another recommendation is to track the times and pairs you tend to trade the most. If you find you are trading mainly USD pairs, during the London and US trading sessions it may benefit you to trade a trending based strategy. Conversely, if you mostly trade the overnight Asia session and your trades are not working out, it may be time to consider a range based strategy.

    The reference material above is just a sliver of the information you may discover by running a trading report. The key is you have to run a report to find out where adjustments can be made.