Forex Market Trading Strategy
For Success
You will find a lot of forex market trading strategies on
the internet but many times these apply only to one or two
systems. Beginners will often pick up a system and try to run
with it without understanding some of the most important
strategies that apply to all forex trading systems. They are
looking for the 'holy grail', the system that will 'work' for
everybody in every situation. Unfortunately it does not
exist.
Disappointment and often, heavy losses can result from
assuming that your system is always going to make money for
you. Professional traders understand this and plan to handle
the losses instead of dreaming of huge wins. The truth is that
there are some forex strategies that should be followed by just
about everybody, and these are the strategies related to risk
management.
1. Set Your Risk Per Trade And Stick To It
Risk management is about the most important skill that you
can develop as a forex trader. It beats technical analysis or
any other technical skill hollow. The reason is that you can
succeed without understanding every mathematical indicator on
your chart, but you cannot succeed without good risk
management.
Letting your risk go too high will mean that sooner or later
your funds will be wiped out. This is statistical fact, it is
not a matter of luck. But how high is too high? That is the
question.
As a general rule, 5% of your funds is the most that you
should risk on any trade. In most cases you will want to go
lower than that. 5% might work for small funds where you are
prepared to take a chance that you might lose all of the money.
Then you would gradually reduce the percentage risk as the fund
grows.
Most professional traders are dealing with risk levels of 1%
per trade or lower. This makes sense when you are dealing with
large amounts of money. A lot of traders would not be
devastated to lose a $500 balance when they first start out, so
they might take a bigger risk with that. But when you have
anything over $100,000 in your forex market trading account,
protecting it must be your first priority.
2. One Trade At A Time
Another principle of good risk management is never to have
more than one trade at risk at a time. This means that you
would never open a second trade until your first trade is in
profit and you have moved the stop loss to a position where
that first trade cannot lose. This applies whether the second
trade would be in the same currency pair or a different
pair.
This means that if world war three suddenly breaks out and
major spikes trigger your stop losses, you do not end up with
multiple losing trades. It also means that if your second trade
turns out not to be so simple you can give it your full
concentration without also being stressed about the first
one.
3. Risk Versus Reward
When you are evaluating a system, always consider the risk
versus the reward. For example if your system requires you to
set a stop loss at 60 pips and your profit goal is 30 pips per
trade, you have a high risk and low reward. On paper this looks
okay as long as you have more than 67% winning trades, but in
practice you will find that it is possible to have several
losses in a row and this could wipe you out. So unless you are
very sure that you know what you are doing and can handle large
losses both psychologically and financially, it is better to
look for a forex market trading system with a profit goal that
is equal to or higher than the stop loss.
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