Great post Bunyip!
I like that your system uses basically no leverage. I could easily cope with the losses and 100 pips would miss most moves from news.
Thanks for sharing that, have you got any trade stats or is this something that you have just recently started to trade?
Cheers,
CanOz
Bunyip: I totally agree with you on trading the daily charts. There have been some really large moves in many of the currency pairs recently. Most of the daily scalpers will have missed these opportunities to earn many hundreds of pips. It pays to keep your eyes on the larger timeframes.
AUDUSD (-1000 pips), EURUSD (-1100 pips), GBPUSD (- 800 pips), USDCHF (+700 pips), USDCAD (+500 pips)
GBPJPY (-800 pips), EURJPY (-500 pips), AUDJPY (- 600 pips)
GBPAUD (+1000 pips, the spread sucks, but the move was big.)
Your money management is sound. While trading the daily charts, it is possible to start many trades that are highly correlated to the one currency, the USD. The recent USD strength created large moves in at least 5 major currency pairs, AUD, EUR, GBP, CHF and CAD. A trader needs to be mindful of portfolio heat in these circumstances, 5 x 2% is risking 10% of the account on the USD strength (long USD).
The recent strength in the JPY (or weakness in the others) created moves in the GBPJPY, EURJPY and AUDJPY pairs, 3 x 2% = another 6% at risk.
Each trader needs to determine their own maximum portfolio heat.
As for stats, I have my trading results on record, but I also have a policy of never ever ever divulging my trading results. When I started trading about 12 years ago an experienced trader told me 'win, lose or draw, you never talk about your trading results. Not even if you're making massive returns.'
I took his lesson to heart, and I've never discussed my trading results with anyone except a couple of close trader friends .
Bunyip, thanks for the great post.
I'm just a bit confuse about the different charts you are talking about.
1. end of day charts; are charts that you have put together with end of day data of the particular currency and so you will trade on their trends the next day.
2. live charts; live data that you continuosly receive.
3. daily charts ??? is this the same as end of day charts?
Apologise for the basic question.
Andrew
No problem with basic questions, Andrew....no question is too basic when you're learning.
Live charts......the data is unfolding on your screen. The price bars are forming and changing right in front of your eyes. You might have your timeframe set at 30 minute bars, meaning that each bar or candle on your chart represents half an hour of price action. Each bar will form and change over a period of half an hour, then a new bar will start to form.
Daily charts and end of day charts are interchangeable terms....each bar on your chart represents 24 hours of price action.
Each day I download the daily Forex data into my charting software. It's usually available about mid morning Australian time. Or if you use the free charts supplied by a Forex broker, they're updated automatically each day.
I look for clearly defined upward or downward trends on daily charts, then focus on identifying temporary retracements against the trend. Temporary retracements soon end, and the main trend resumes. This is simply supply and demand at work.
If you become skilled at identifying these points where the main trend resumes after a brief retracement during an established trend, you have an ideal entry point. If you add the essential ingredients of cutting your losers quickly but sticking with your winners for the duration of their trends, you have yourself a simple, effective and profitable trading system that will harvest many nice profits from the Forex market year after year.
Hey, thats fine i understand. I was really interested in a W/L rate, trade frequency, and maybe a max DD that you might have had. I'm more just curious whether or not it is something i could trade or not, knowing what i'm comfortable with.
One thing i noticed or didn't notice much of when i was trading FX were obvious patterns on the EOD charts. The charts seem to be really "thick" with allot of overlapping bars/candles...they just look different. Is it more S&R that you use?
Looking at the charts again, significant low and highs seem like potential trade points.
I'll try and post a chart....on the other hand i guess the entry is not that important, theres plenty of congestion patterns, its just a matter of hanging onto to those winners and....well you know the rest.
Cheers,
CanOz
Bunyip, may i ask who your broker is? And the minimum lot size etc.
Also, you don't need to be too fussy about the spread with EOD correct?
Cheers,
CanOz
My broker is IG Markets.
Spread size is not near as critical with end of day trading as it is with intraday trading.
For an intraday trader aiming to capture 20 point moves, a 5 point spread is a significant bite out of his profit.
For an end of day trader who might reasonably expect to snare moves of several hundred points, a 5 point spread is insignificant.
an even easier thing to do: get a metatrader demo, look at your pairs at about 7:05am AEST (when New York closes and a new daily candle starts) and apply something like Guppy's Trend Trading system executing on which ever broker you wish. MBT is a true blue ECN which has extremely elaborate order types and only costs you $400USD to open an account. 1:100 leverage (cant change the leverage and all the buying power readouts reflect that so if you want to place a trade with effectively no leverage (miniumum is 1000 lots ($0.10USD a pip)) you need to calculate it yourself).
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