Inflection, thanks for sharing such an interesting system with us! I'm also a Forex newbie, and have spent a lot time myself finding almost-"Holy Grail" systems, which then turn out to not be such!
So I have a few concerns. Firstly, I'd suggest that you always take spread into account - although it does not seem much, it does add up, and especially when compounding is used, seemingly small differences in pips can have a dramatic effect.
For a dramatic illustration suppose you get 1% a day for a 1000 days - after compounding, $1 turns into $20,959, however if you get 0.9% for the same period, you only get $7,783 in the end! Almost 3 times less!
Another point is that I'm concerned that this system - at least the EUR/USD and USD/CAD version of it, relies on long-term decline of the dollar. By always going long on EUR/USD for example, you are betting that the dollar will eventually go down. While this has been the case for the past 5-6 years, this hasn't always been the case, and definitely won't be always.
In fact, if you plot the total number of pips you get (again on EUR/USD), the plot practically mirrors the daily chart of EUR/USD. The massive drawdown you get in 2005 is due to a retracement of the long-term trend.
Suppose somebody decided to start using this system in 2001, and looked at the few years before then, they would find that it's best to use this system going short all the time. But they would then more likely than not go bust when the dollar lost its strength in the ensuing few years.
Therefore it would be nice to somehow introduce short trades as well, to take into account a possible change in the overall longterm trade.
This could either be by using another currency pair where you go long on USD, or somehow identifying changes in the long-term trend, or retracements of long-term trends.
In any case, try testing over a longer period of time. Historical daily data is readily available quite far back, so it would be wise in my opinion to test over at least one full up-down cycle, so that you could test ways to detect changes in the prevailing trend.
Overall this system looks promising, and hopefully you'll develop it further! Good luck!
So I have a few concerns. Firstly, I'd suggest that you always take spread into account - although it does not seem much, it does add up, and especially when compounding is used, seemingly small differences in pips can have a dramatic effect.
For a dramatic illustration suppose you get 1% a day for a 1000 days - after compounding, $1 turns into $20,959, however if you get 0.9% for the same period, you only get $7,783 in the end! Almost 3 times less!
Another point is that I'm concerned that this system - at least the EUR/USD and USD/CAD version of it, relies on long-term decline of the dollar. By always going long on EUR/USD for example, you are betting that the dollar will eventually go down. While this has been the case for the past 5-6 years, this hasn't always been the case, and definitely won't be always.
In fact, if you plot the total number of pips you get (again on EUR/USD), the plot practically mirrors the daily chart of EUR/USD. The massive drawdown you get in 2005 is due to a retracement of the long-term trend.
Suppose somebody decided to start using this system in 2001, and looked at the few years before then, they would find that it's best to use this system going short all the time. But they would then more likely than not go bust when the dollar lost its strength in the ensuing few years.
Therefore it would be nice to somehow introduce short trades as well, to take into account a possible change in the overall longterm trade.
This could either be by using another currency pair where you go long on USD, or somehow identifying changes in the long-term trend, or retracements of long-term trends.
In any case, try testing over a longer period of time. Historical daily data is readily available quite far back, so it would be wise in my opinion to test over at least one full up-down cycle, so that you could test ways to detect changes in the prevailing trend.
Overall this system looks promising, and hopefully you'll develop it further! Good luck!