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Items Tagged With exit

USD/CHF 2006-02-21
Written By: Rich
2006-02-22 12:29:00

TRADE

Date: Tuesday, February 21st

Entry: Short USD/CHF at 1.3082

Reason for trade/setup: Using the 240-minute chart, there was the presence of a downward trend line above.  In addition, a momentum indicator that I created and am currently testing indicated a short opportunity.  Furthur confirmation was obtained from the 3-period, 5-period Price oscillator using EMA and the continued downward movement of the 8-period, 21-period Price oscillator.  Stochastic crossover and a decreasing rate of change since early February provided double-secret confirmation.

Initial Stop:  1.3121, the high of the entry day.

Initial Target:  1.3050 then 1.2950 which are horizontal support lines.

RESULT 

Exit: 1.3121

Reason for Exit:  Stop Loss triggered

Profit/loss:  -38 pips

Trade executed according to plan? yes

Outcome: After trade entry, the pair had remained close with the downward trend line.  Volatility was non-existent during Asian session.  The USD was bullish going into the European session and the pair went as high as 1.3153 stopping me out of the position between 3 am and 7 am.  This trade never moved in my favor by more than a couple of pips.

Thoughts:  All the indicators in the world can't predict the future.  I seemed to have multiple confirmation, felt great about the trade, yet it didn't turn out well.  I feel good about executing the trade though because I didn't go against my plan.  I saw a possible setup and pulled the trigger.  If I could do it all over again I would make the trade again but may have waited for an increase in volatility.  In addition, I probably set my profit targets too high considering the lack of price action this week.



USD/JPY 2006-02-21
Written By: Rich
2006-02-22 20:40:00

UPDATE!!!  The pair has dropped another 70 pips since I exited.  That is why I am far from reaching my goal.

TRADE

Date: Tuesday, February 21st

Entry: Short USD/JPY at 118.78.

Reason for trade/setup: This trade was mostly based on the fact that resistance was up above at 119.00.  Furthur confirmation was obtained from the crossover of the Stochastic (9(3),3) from overbought territory. 

Initial Stop:  119.06, which was 6 pips above the high of the entry day.

Initial Target:  118.00 which is the top of the Ichimoku Kumo or cloud.

RESULT 

Exit: 118.35

Reason for Exit:  Profit taking.  I needed to get back on track this week.  I couldn't leave $1000 on the table

Profit/loss:  43 pips / $1070

Trade executed according to plan? no; early exit

Outcome: After trade entry, the pair played with the 119.00 resistance level for the entire U.S. trading session before finally finding more sellers than buyers at the Asian open.  The pair then stalled at 118.40 during lunchtime in Japan on Tuesday evening.  The pair retraced almost back to the 119.00 mark on Wednesday during the European session before heading back down.  There is solid resistance at 119.00.  I exited the trade before my target.  The main reason was for my need to get back some of my losses from the week.  I didn't want to leave $1000 on the table.

Yen Dollar Trade 

 

 



Yen Swing Trade Analysis
Written By: Rich
2006-02-25 17:51:32

TRADE

Date: Friday, February 24th

Entry: Short USD/JPY at 117.05

Reason for trade/setup: With a downward trend in motion, I was looking for a swing trade to short the USD/JPY.  I was waiting for price to retrace back up where a minor Asian session breakdown occurred several hours prior at 117.10.  The DMI indicator was used as confirmation that the existing trend was still in place.

Initial Stop:  117.19; the high of previous bar

Initial Target:  116.40

RESULT 

Exit: 116.76

Reason for Exit:  End of day

Profit/loss:  +29 pips/ +$745.10 (3 lots)

Trade executed according to plan? yes

Outcome: This trade entry went exactly according to plan so much so that it surprised me.  The price didn't reach my limit and that didn't surprise me. 

Thoughts:  The market doesn't generate trades like this everyday and this setup would only apply to trending markets.

Forex swing trade 

 

 

 

 



Preserving Capital
Written By: Rich
2006-03-03 10:19:11

Greg made a comment regarding a trader that interests me:

Two books worth their time: Market Wizards, and The New Market Wizards. One of the traders interviewed made the observaton that on any given day trading is probably luck, but if the trader is consistently winning over time, it's not luck. Another trader said the whole purpose of entering a trade was to preserve capital (he has never had a losing month.)

Entering a trade with the purpose of preserving capital is an interesting way to go about things.  I will probably read more about this in the upcoming days. 

For next week, I think I will change my exit strategy which may help with my early exits.  Instead of entry of 3 lots and exit of 3 lots, I will start to use a multi-lot exit strategy, one in which is probably based on multiple targets.  This will definately require more management per trade but if my worry all along has been with giving back profit, this may help curb it a bit.

This weekend I will also be working on formally drafting a real trading plan.  I will post sections as they are completed.



Dollar Strength and EUR/USD Channel
Written By: Rich
2006-02-27 10:43:32

I've been trading the EUR/USD since yesterday evening and caught the breakdown below 1.1855.  The USD has not been able to push below 1.1827 though and until then the price may remain in a 60 pip channel.  

EUR/USD Channel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I'm up a little more than $400 to start the week in realized gains but as of now am only in a short EUR/USD position that I entered on a pullback last night.   There haven't been any major developments since the Asian trading session set most currency pairs in motion except for the USD/CAD which has broken down nearly 75 pips from yesterday evening.  I was actually long on a USD/CAD position yesterday and decided to get out after hearing that some favorable economic reports were expected from Canada this morning.  This demonstrates some good behavior on my part with an exit of the position with a $100 loss.  I didn't see the pair doing what I would have expected from my technical analysis and wasn't aware of the economic reports coming out of Canada when I entered the position.  What good would it have been to stay in the position?



Trading Full-Time continued
Written By: Rich
2006-04-25 11:03:32

Thanks to Forex2stay for the following comments.  Visit his blog at http://forex2stay.blogspot.com/

I do think it's possible, but I believe money mangement is the key. This needs to be a marathon not a sprint. One thing I've realized is that you can't use the same lot sizes for all of your trades. For example on one trade you might be risking 30 pips and another 20 pips. So if you trade 4 lots on both of them (standard account) you'd be risking $1,200 on one trade and $800 on the other. That's not good money management and it can get you a person in trouble.Here's what I do.....

When I position trade (4hr and daily charts), I won't trade unless I have a 2:1 risk reward ratio. I figure out the proper stop loss for my trade, based on TA. So for this example say that's 40 pips. I then make sure based on TA that I'm comfortable getting at least 80 - 120 pips profit. Once i'm comfortable I put my information into the following formula.

S=(E*R) / (P-X)

S = Size of Trade
E = Account size (Cash)
R = Maximum Risk percentage per trade
P = entry price on the trade
X = pre-determined stop loss or exit price

So let's put in some numbers.....

My account size $10, 000
Entry price on EUR/USD 1.2600
Currently I'll risk 3% of my account on a trade
My pre-determined SL is 1.2560

So how many shares of EUR can we buy with our money management rules??

S=($10,000 * 3%) / (1.2600 - 1.2560)
S = $300 / .40
S= 75,000

Anyway this is the way I do it. I hope it helps...

Forex2stay



Weekend Reading - Keeping an eye on Momentum
Written By: Rich
2006-02-19 15:14:28

Keep An Eye On Momentum

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/forex/05/MomentumMACD.asp

This article states the obvious yet brings up a simple setup that I never thought about.  The basic premise is that momentum precedes price.  Any momentum indicator can be used but this article uses MACD as an example.

1.    Define a MACD segment.  Segment #1 below.

MACD momentum segment setup 

 

 

 

2.    Measure the highest bar of segment #1.  In the above case, the highest bar was .004.

3.    Wait until the next segment forms; segment #2 above.  If a bar from segment #2 falls below -.004, downward momentum has exceeded previous upward momentum.
Segment #2 consists of 10 bars.  The values are in order from left to right (-.001, -.004, -.006, -.007, -.008, -.008, -.008, -.006, -.002, -.0008)

The third bar from the left is -.006, showing greater momentum than during anytime in segment #1. Sell at the close of this bar (price=1.7579.)  Exit the position at your discretion but a good time to do so might be when momentum slows.  Momentum stalls 2 consecutive bars at bar #7.  MACD value is -.008.  Exit at the close of this bar (price=1.7381)

The profit is close to 200 pips.  Like every other setup, this will not always be successful and should be used in conjunction with other confirmation tools. 

What I like most about this setup is its simplicity.



Stick to your Trading Plan
Written By: Rich
2006-03-05 23:16:46

Here's a post by Lloyd on his blog at http://tradingforaliving-assess.blogspot.com 

American trader and hypnotherapist Robert Krausz argues that 75% of trading depends on your psychology and claims that hypnosis can be used to control your emotional state to maximise your trading performance.

However, he stresses on the importance of having a trading plan at the first place!

Here are the 5 basic tasks necessary to become a winning trader and my personal takes:

1. Develop an analytical methodology
-- For myself, I read fundamental news and run technical analysis

2. Extract a trading plan from this methodology
-- I set up short-term swing trades (1-3 days), always try to pick good entry and exit prices

3. Formulate rules for this plan including money management
-- Take profits while ahead, find the best place to get out on bad trades, not relying on stop loss

4. Back-test the plan over a long period
-- Start trading small positions and allow mistakes

5. Finally, stick to the plan
-- Having confidence and keep practicing till perfect



Staying with the Trend
Written By: Rich
2006-02-27 14:41:16

I have started the week on a positive note and sit at +$1000.  I have been watching the DMI indicator to confirm that a trend is still in place before buying or selling a pullback.  Though I have done this successfully today, I have a hard time holding on to these trades and have not followed my own advice on where I've been placing my limits..  Once I can net about $300-$400 on the trade, I've been exiting.  Now this might look good on paper right now but the simple fact is that I don't do this when a trade is going against me which means that my risk/reward is poor.  I set a stop but never a stop that triggers when I'm only down about $300-$400.  My stops are usually a minimum of about 30 pips so this would net me a loss of $900.  One bad trade and I'm back to square one.

Call this rationalizing but I feel like exiting now with a smaller profit may be sufficient due to the lack of liquidity in the market until either the Asian or European sessions. 

I'll continue to work on holding on to my positions longer when the pair is going in my direction.  I should learn my lesson after exiting my USD/JPY position last week right before the big 100 pip move down.  I could see using my exit strategy if I was trading the 15, 30, or 60 minute charts but I'm usually trading the 240-minute (my favorite period.)



FP-1 Trading System
Written By: Rich
2006-03-14 22:08:55

I've started trading my new trading system which I've simply named FP-1.   I've been spending a lot of time tweaking it over the last couple of days.  I've made it quite simple to indicate a buy and a sell opportunity.  The red circle indicates a sell and the green circle a buy.  If you see a blue circle, this is a losing exit.  If you see a yellow circle, this is a winning exit.

FP-1 trading system 

 

 

 

 

 I just went went short on the EUR/USD where the last red circle is.






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