59 pips

October 26, 2006

I had a decent trade today catching a lot of the GBP/USD move upward during the European and US Session.  I only traded 1 lot since this was a discretionary trade but nevertheless profited 59 pips.  The H-system didn't generate any signals because of rare Asian session movement.  My discretionary methods do have rules but are not as systematic as the H-system.  I feel like my personality is more geared toward systematic methods of trading and therefore trying to systematize if possible is ultimately my goal.  

I feel like my confusion earlier in the week has waned.  I'm committed to trading the H-system and I'm working hard to manufacture additional systems that could eventually be used in production.  Mike sent me an email yesterday stating that he has had instances, as I'm sure a lot of you have, where he has suffered over 10 consecutive losses.  At no time though did he feel confused because he trusted his system after backtesting it on 10 years worth of data and therefore considered it just part of trading.  He never doubted his system.

10 Steps to Guarantee Failure

October 26, 2006

I found this on Digg today and it's certainly worth reading.  The 10 steps are targeted to a broad category of people and not necessarily towards traders but it might as well be.  All steps are relevent to trading:

  1. Make your goals vague
  2. Make your goals difficult to visualize
  3. Think and speak negatively of your goals
  4. Avoid planning incremental steps
  5. Don't Do – Talk
  6. Wait until you are motivated
  7. Don't set a date
  8. List why it's impossible
  9. Don't research your goal
  10. Think of anything but your goal

http://www.persistenceunlimited.com/2006/05/10-steps-you-can-take-to-guarantee-failure/

Money Blogs Lacking The Goods

October 25, 2006

I just read a review of TheMoneyBlogs which is a financial blog aggregator run by Trading Markets.  The review was done by Business Week and was not favorable.  I'm mentioning it now because I found myself in the same situation that Business Week found other financial blog authors. 

I was approached by Trading Markets asking me to allow them to pull the full feed from my site, essentially pulling all content, and having it displayed on Trading Markets and The Money Blogs.  What was in it for me?  I thought that it would give The Forex Project more exposure but after some technical issues they were having pulling my feed, I decided to abandon any attempts to have my posts displayed on their site.  I'm glad I did at this point seeing that Business Week sites that the link back to your blog that Trading Markets places on their site was hard to find and tucked away.  In addition, they plaster ads everywhere essentially making revenue off your hard work.  So I'm not really knocking their business model; if they can make money doing that fine, but I'm just glad I'm not contributing to it.  

http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/oct2006/tc20061025_067653.htm

FOMC Day

October 24, 2006

I looked into the past at the price action 12-24 hours prior to an FOMC release and as expected, consolidation appears more times than not.  What this means is that I could very well be sidelined until Thursday because I won't attempt to trade the FOMC tomorrow.   Of course, I could change my mind if the GBP/USD continues its ascent.  

I'm feeling good about sticking to the H-system even with the loss today.  The first thing I did when I got home from work today was open up my charts to look for a possible filters that I may be able to incorporate.  One such filter that looks promising is divergence between price and MACD.  I've heard that in general divergence fails more than it succeeds but my experiences with it have shown that as long as you don't use it as a standalone system, it could be useful.  

H-system Comeback With a Loss

October 24, 2006

After some thinking and some helpful advice, I've decided to stick with the H-system.  It has proven so far to be profitable yet today I was stopped out on all 3 lots, -90 pips.  The GBP/USD pressed downward overnight but failed to press further hours prior to the US session open.   This loss does not phase me whatsoever.  If anything, I feel good just to be trading with it again.  It's basically the only system I have right now and the plan is to continue to trade it in the coming weeks and beyond. 

I just wanted to give a quick update on my state of trading and have nothing else to report at this time.  I've been busy at work all day today, mostly writing up documentation, so the carpal tunnel is really in force.

Before I go, click READ MORE to view the totally beneficial comments received from Bill, Adam, and FX T.D. I chewed on Craig's comments yesterday before the others came in and found that they started to sway me back towards my system… 

CRAIG 

Keep trading the H system, you know it works. While you are doing this
forward test your other system ideas (MT4 is good for this). Systems
will come and go as the market changes, sometimes this becomes
overwhelming so what I find is I need a system for my systems. e.g.

1. Trade the best you currently have
2. Forward test new ideas on test accounts
3. If new system is better, replace old system 

[Read more]

When to call it a day with your system

October 23, 2006

Hi Rich,
I Read your blog today and just wanted to share something with you. About 2 months ago in the middle of 1 of many losing streaks, I had an epiphany which I feel has helped me understand what it takes to be a 
successful trader.
Basically as traders we all have to acknowledge, understand and embrace the Forex for what it really is – A market that is controlled, fueled and driven by human emotion. No order, no logic, no sense. Embrace the fact even when all your signals are pointing to enter long the market will still go short for no reason whatsoever. It sounds crazy but embrace losing! Embrace that you re not in control and the market will do exactly whatever it wants through no fault of your own.
In my opinion, I feel the reason why so many traders fail in this game is because they can’t handle being wrong, they like being right, they like the feeling of superiority when the marketdoes as they predict and they go insane when the market goes against them.
Regardless what my predictions or gut feelings are about what direction the market will go I always obey my system. Even if every bone in my body tells me not to enter when all my rules are fulfilled I still enter. And when I do – sometimes I lose and sometimes I win however regardless what happens I’m always comforted in the fact that I obeyed my system.
And I will obey my system till one of 2 things happen: Either I reach my financial goal or I lose all I invested and kiss the forex goodbye.
Madness, genius or just downright stupidity? Personally as I write this it definitely feels like the latter.
My point is that ive given up trying to second this cursed market. I’m fed up of not closing my trade when I was 30 pips up only for the market to retrace and close me out at a loss and feeling the anger that follows. Or worse – getting your stop hit just before the market retraces 100 pips.
As you know from my previous email I am far from successful in my trading, in fact im currently showing a 38% strike rate and have had 2 losing months which has wiped nearly a third off my capital. But saying that ive increased my capital by 57% from when I started. Its only been 5 months tho, my progress means nothing, especially with the pennies that im trading with. However saying that im still in this game, and not at a loss.
Is it because my system is great? Is it because I have a 6th sense for Forex? Or am I just lucky? Neither. I’m
just blindly following my system, trying to put some kind of order into a world without order so to speak.
My advice Rich is to stick to your H-system. Couple it with money management and compounding. Stick with it to the very end. At least if you lose your investment you will have peace of mind that you had a plan that you believed in it and you stuck to it till the end.
I sincerely apologise if this email has agitated or annoyed you or made me out to be some cocky newbie smartass. I assure you nothing is further from the truth.
To have tried and not succeed doesn’t not mean you failed, to never have tried in the first place is the true failure.
Kindest regards
Peter

Confusion Setting In

October 23, 2006

I'm not going to lie to anyone here… the rollercoaster ride continues with me.  I'm so utterly confused and really don't know what to do at this point.  First I had a trading system, then I did furthur backtesting on this system and lost confidence in it due to the results.  Then I didn't have a trading system.  Then I decided to stick with the system.  I had a trading system again.   Then I decided to explore other systems and while doing so lost confidence in my initial system again.  Now I'm a man without any system….

So what am I going to do to fix this?  I'm still leaning toward going back to the H-system especially after missing the nice big profit it would have given me today.  The results would have been good last week too if I had traded it.  The only good thing I see from all of this is that the confusion has not led me to stupid losses making me realize that my discipline over the last couple of months has been good.  I haven't done anything that would have jeopardized the balance of my account and I haven't impulsively entered a trade just for the sake of doing so.  The disappointing thing about all of this is that just feels like square one again.

What Does Surfing Have To Do With Trading

October 20, 2006

Thank Bill for his comment and interested analogy on surfing and trading:

I share your apparent struggle with the 'I'm a trader so I need to
trade' impulse, as I'm sure all traders do. It's only recently that
I've become marginally comfortable with the idea that it's ok not to
surf every wave that comes my way.

Feeling 'in-sync' or 'out
of sync' with the market is analogous to catching a wave for a fat ride
or missing a wave that might have either given you a fat ride … or,
ground your face into the ocean floor.

As you know, trading for
trading's sake is dangerous … and so unnecessary. Yet, all traders
have to deal with what to do with their feelings of frustration. I
mean, how long can a surfer sit on his stupid board and watch waves
pass by?

The fact is, traders can't make the market send them
decent set-ups anymore than surfers can make Mother Nature send decent
waves.

Basically, it's an emotional battle. Traders want to make
something happen … but, the reality is, traders can only ride the
waves that are sent their way. The trader's real job is to be
sufficiently alert and aware to recognize a good wave when as it
approaches and to position himself to catch the ride before the swell
rolls past.

Then, of course, there's gratitude. Gratitude that
Mother Nature gave you 12 pips rather than grind your face into the
ocean floor.

Forex Trading Out of Sync

October 20, 2006

This week I squeaked by with a profit of 12 pips.   I felt totally out of sync with the market though.  My priorities shifted this week to more web development and I just didn't feel like I ever got focused.  I sat on the sidelines Thursday and Friday which was the wise thing to do.  There is nothing wrong with sitting it out for a couple of days especially if you cannot gain focus.  It's times like these where I may have forced it in the past.  I used to just get in the market just for the sake of being in it which is a good way to lose money.  

I have more things to say but I'm out of time.  I hope everyone had a productive week.  Stay tuned as there are a couple of posts that I should be getting out today and tomorrow.  Their in my head but I just have to put it down on "paper."   Take care.

Forex Project Is Now In 10 Languages

October 19, 2006

The Forex Project can now be translated to the following languages:

French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Arabic.

I cannot read any of these languages with the minor exception of Spanish where I know words like Hola and Como Esta so there really is no way for me to know how well this site is being translated.  In one of my posts, the spanish translation for Rob Booker is Robo Booker.   For any multilingual visitors, please let me know if the translation is readable.   

To translate, click one of the nine flags on the right menu above the big FXCM advertisement.

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