Forex blog
Trader Rich
Contact Me
My Forex Graphs
Forex Contests
Goal & Performance
Money Management
My Forex Books
My Forex Journal
My Trade History
Advertise Advertise
Login/Logout Login/Logout
Forex RSS Feeds
Forex Technical
Daily Pivot Points
Divergence Chart
Forex Charts & Images
Forex Videos
Metatrader Indicators
Forex Resources
Broker Research
Forex Beginner
Forex Calendar
Forex Cloud
Forex Links
Forex Polls
Forex Search
Forex Top Sites
FX Position Size Calc
FX Risk Calculator
Knowledge Base
MM Checklist
Ratings and Reviews
The List
250 Most Popular Posts
Old Stuff
H Trading System
FX Engines Results
FX Engines Trades
Lien Schlossberg
Rob Booker Posts
Forex Trading
Categories
Chart Formations
Forex Trading
Learn Forex
Psychology
Trading Systems
Blog Archives
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
RSS Feed
feed image
feed image

 Subscribe in a reader

Business Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
Blog Search Engine
Forex Project
Forex Sitemap
 
Fear and Impulse Trading Forex
Thursday, February 23, 2006

Last night was a night of mixed emotions for me.  I usually don't hold positions longer than a day but I was holding on to the USD/JPY for a little longer waiting for the pair to decline a bit.  It finally did and I grabbed over $1000 when I closed the trade at 118.35.  I was fearful that it would retrace again toward 119.00 and therefore I just wanted to get back on track for the week.  As a lot of you know, the USD/JPY plummeted last night (right after I exited) and was sitting at the 117.00 this morning.  If I would have held on to the position, I would be sitting up over $5000 on 1 trade.  I will put this one behind me but I made a real big mistake on my next trade.

Immediately after exited my Yen position, I started scanning my charts and came to the CHF/JPY and the price sitting right on solid resistance line.  Thinking it was oversold and not knowing that the Yen was having a huge downward move (after my exit), I impulsively and foolishly entered a long trade in the CHF/JPY.  The Yen pushed downward and hit my stop in about 30 minutes.  I lost about $600 on this trade.  This was a total impulsive move, one in which I entered the trade without really looking at anything but 1 line.

From past history, when the USD/JPY has had a large downward move during the Asian trading session, a USD bearish move follows for the GBP and EUR during the European session.  That is why I went long on the EUR last night and made 44 pips on 3 lots which amounted to $1300.

So I probably only caught about a third of the Yen move and fearful of giving back my profit, I gave away the other two-thirds.  It's no wonder I always hear that the hardest part of trading is the exit.

The last 2 weeks, I've had to scratch my way back after starting the week down.  Last week I was able to do it with a $700 profit.  This week, I've made my way back to -$475 with 1 trading day to go.  I'm not going to rush into anything though so if my week is done, so be it. 

Forex Tags
See All Tags
February 2006  Forex Trading  forex psychology 
There are no comments for this item.
Please keep your comments brief and on topic, and remember that this is not a discussion thread.
Name : Website :
Title :
Comment(s) :
Verify : What countries currency is the British Pound ?
Last Updated ( Thursday, February 23, 2006 )
< Prev   Next >
Explore These Other Forex Related Posts
  1. Week 10 Forex Performance
  2. USD/CAD trade profitable
  3. Profitable Trade Today
  4. Week 11 Forex Trading Performance
  5. TIC Report and my CAD position
Search Forex Project
Select Language
 

©2005-2008 Forex Project Properties LLC.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.