• Home
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • News
  • Calendar
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Login
  • Join
  • User/Email: Password:
  • 1:42pm
Menu
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • News
  • Calendar
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Login
  • Join
  • 1:42pm
Sister Sites
  • Metals Mine
  • Energy EXCH
  • Crypto Craft

Options

Bookmark Thread

First Page First Unread Last Page Last Post

Print Thread

Similar Threads

How to avoid losing more money than you put into your account in MT4? 6 replies

45 Ways to avoid losing money trading forex by Jimmy Young 7 replies

Making Sense of FX Broker Stop Loss Policy, By Jimmy Young 4 replies

Essential Elements of a Successful Trader, by Jimmy Young 0 replies

  • Trading Discussion
  • /
  • Reply to Thread
  • Subscribe
Tags: 45 Ways to Avoid Losing Money Trading FOREX, by Jimmy Young
Cancel

45 Ways to Avoid Losing Money Trading FOREX, by Jimmy Young

  • Last Post
  •  
  • Page 1 2 3
  • Page 1 2 3
  •  
  • Post #1
  • Quote
  • First Post: Edited Aug 10, 2007 6:52am Jun 16, 2006 12:57pm | Edited Aug 10, 2007 6:52am
  •  FX Articles
  • Joined Feb 2006 | Status: Member | 91 Posts
1) Knowledge Deficiency – Most new FOREX traders don’t take the time to learn what drives currency rates (primarily fundamentals). When news or a statement is due out they must close out their positions and sit out the best trading opportunities. They are taught to only trade after the market calms down. So essentially they miss the whole move and then trade the random noise that follows a fundamental price move. Just think for a moment about technically trading the aftermath of a price move; there is no potential.

2) Overtrading - Trading often with tight stops and tiny profit targets will only make the broker rich. The desire to “just” make a few hundred dollars a day by locking in tiny profits whenever possible is a losing strategy.

3) Over leveraged - Leverage is a two way street. The brokers want you to use high leverage because that means more spread income because your position size determines the amount of spread income; the bigger the position the more spread income the broker earns.

4) Relying on Others – Real traders play a lone hand; they make their own decisions and don’t rely on others to make their trading decisions for them; there is no halfway; either trade for yourself or have someone else trade for you.

5) Stop Losses – Putting tight stop losses with retail brokers is a recipe for disaster. When you put on a trade commit to a reasonable stop loss limit that allows your trade a fair chance to develop.

6) Demo Accounts – Broker demo accounts are a shill game of sorts; they’re not as time sensitive as real accounts and therefore give the impression that time sensitive trading systems, such as short-term moving average crossovers can be consistently profitably traded; once you start dealing with real money reality is quick to set in.

7) Trading During Off Hours – Bank FX traders, option traders, and hedge funds have a huge advantage during off hours; they can push the currencies around when no volume is going through and the end game is new traders get fleeced trying to trade signals. There is only one signal during off hours – stay out.

8) Trading a Currency, Not a Pair – Being right about a currency is half a trade; success or failure depends upon being right about the second currency that makes up the pair.

9) No Trading Plan - Make money is not a trading plan. A trading plan is a blueprint for trading success; it spells out what you see your edge as being; if you don’t have an edge, you don’t have a plan, and likely you’ll wind up a statistic (part of the 95% of new traders that lose and quit).

10) Trading Against Prevailing Trend – There is a huge difference between buying cheaply on the way down and buying cheaply. What was a low price quickly becomes a high price when you’re trading against the trend.

11) Exiting Trades Poorly – If you put on a trade and it’s not working make sure you exit properly; don’t compound the damage. If you’re in a winning trade don’t talk yourself out of the position because you’re bored or want to relieve stress; stress is a natural part of trading; get use to it.

12) Trading Too Short-term – If you’re profit target is less than 20 points don’t do the trade; the spread you pay to enter the trade makes the odds way against you when you go for these tiny profits.

13) Picking Tops and Bottoms - Looking for bargains works well at the supermarket but not trading foreign exchange; try to trade in the direction the price is going and you’re results will improve.

14) Being Too Smart – The most successful traders I know are high school graduates. They keep it simple and don’t look beyond the obvious; their results are excellent.

15) Not Trading Around News Time – Most of the big moves occur around news time. The volume is high and the moves are real; there is no better time to trade fundamentally or technically than when news is released; this is when the real money adjusts their positions and as a result the prices changes reflect serious currency flow (compared to quiet times when Bank traders rule the market with their customer order flow.

16) Ignore Technical Condition – Determining whether the market is over-extended long or over-extended short is a key determinant of near time price action. Spike moves often occur when the market is all one way.

17) Emotional Trading – When you don’t pre-plan you’re trades essentially it’s a thought and not an idea; thoughts are emotions and a very poor basis for doing trades. Do people generally say intelligent things when they are upset and emotional; I don’t think so.

18) Lack of Confidence – Confidence only comes from successful trading. If you lose money early in your trading career it’s very difficult to gain true confidence; the trick is don’t go off half-cocked; learn the business before you trade.

19) Lack of Courage to Take a Loss – There is nothing macho or gutsy about riding a loss, just stupidity and cowardice. It takes guts to accept your loss and wait for tomorrow to try again. Getting married to a bad position ruins lots of traders. The thing to remember is the market does crazy things often so don’t get married to any one trade; it’s just a trade. One good trade will not make you a trading success; rather it’s monthly and annual performance that defines a good trader.

20) Not Focusing on the Trade at Hand – There is no room for fantasizing in successful trading. Counting up and mentally spending profits you haven’t made yet is mental masturbation and does you no good. Same with worrying about a loss that hasn’t happened yet. Focus on your position and have a reasonable stop loss in place at the time you do the trade. Then be like an astronaut – sit back and enjoy the ride; no sense worrying because you have no real control; the market will do what it wants to do.

21) Interpreting FOREX News Incorrectly – Fact is the press only has a very superficial understanding of the news they are reporting and tend to focus on one element and miss the point. Learn to read the source documents and understand it for real.

22) Lucky or Good – Your account balance changes don’t tell you the whole story about your trading; fact is if your taking a lot of risk and making money you will eventually crash and burn. Look at the individual trade details; focus on your big loses and losing streaks. Ask yourself this; if I had a couple of consecutive losing streaks or a couple of consecutive big loses, how would my account balance look. Generally, traders making money without big daily loses have the best chance of sustaining positive performance. The others are accidents waiting to happen.

23) Too Many Charity Trades – When you make money on a well thought out trade don’t give back half on a whim; invest your profits from good trades on the next good trade.

24) Courage Under Fire – When a policeman breaks down the door to a drug dealers apartment he is scared but he does it anyway. When a fireman climbs onto the roof of a burning building he is scared but does it anyway; and gets the job done. Same with trading; it’s ok to be scared but you have to pull the trigger; no trigger – no trades – no profits – no trader.

25) Quality Trading Time – I suggest 3 hours a day of quality, focused trading time; that’s about all your brain allows. When your trading being 100% focused; half way is bullshit’ it doesn’t work. Don’t even think that time spent in front of the computer watching the rates has any correlation to profitability; it doesn’t. Spend less time but when your trading be 100% focused on trading.

26) Rationalizing – Killer. Absolute Killer. Put your trade on and let it run. If it hits your reasonable pre-determined stop your out. Think of yourself as a prizefighter; you just got knocked out. Moving your stop is like getting up after being crushed with a knockout blow; it’s pointless; things will only get worse. Don’t ignore the obvious; your wrong – get out. Come back the next day and try again. A small loss will not hurt you; a catastrophic loss will.

27) Mixing Apples and Oranges – Have you ever done this; you see the EURUSD trading higher so you buy GBPUSD because it “hasn’t moved yet”. That’s a mistake. Most of the time the reason the GBPUSD hasn’t moved yet is because its already overbought or some 4:30am UK news was bearish. Don’t mix apples and oranges; if EURUSD looks bid buy EURUSD.

28) Avoiding the Hard Trades – Bank FX traders have an axiom; the harder the trade is to do the better the trade. This I learned from experience; when I needed to buy EURUSD and it was hard to get them that’s when it’s necessary to pay up and get the business done. When it’s easy to get them then sit back and wait for better levels. So if your trying to get into a trade or more importantly get out of a trade don’t putz around for a few points; get your business done.

29) Too Much Detail – If your trading more than 2 indicators then you need to clean house. Having many indicators stifles trading and finds reasons not to trade. A setup and a trigger is all you need.

30) Giving Up Too Easy – Your first trade of the day may not be your best but certainly it’s no reason to quit. I have a preset daily trading limit and I use it; you can’t make money by making excuses; getting trades wrong is natural and should be expected.

31) Jumping the Gun – Don’t be penny wise and dollar foolish; wait for your trade signal to be clear; put on your trade and give it a decent size stop loss so that you don’t get knocked out by random noise. Do trades don’t’ buy lottery tickets (extremely tight stops).

32) Afraid to Take a Loss - trading is not personal; it’s business. Don’t think that a poor trade is a reflection on you. It could be your just ahead of your time or a commercial order hits the market and temporarily creates a small unexpected move. Again, place your stop beforehand and NEVER increase your pre-determined risk; if it’s going bad it will probably get worse; I think that’s Einstein “in motion stays in motion…”

33) Over-Relying on Risk Reward – There is zero advantage in risk reward; if you put a 20 point stop and a 60 point profit your chances are probably 3-1 that you will lose; actually with the spread its more like 4 to 1 (from entry point if it goes down 17 points you lose or up 63 you win; 17/63 is close to 4-1).

34) Trading for Wrong Reasons – Because the EURUSD is going up is not in itself a reason to buy. Buying EURUSD because its not moving so little risk is even worse; you’re paying the toll (spread) without even a hint that you will get a directional move. If your bored don’t trade; the reason your bored is there is no trade to do in the first place.

35) Rumors – Rumors are rumors almost 100% of the time; think about where in the motion you heard the rumor; if EURUSD is up 50 points in last 15 minutes and the rumor is dollar negative, well then you missed it. Whenever you trades determine where in the motion you are entering.

36) Trading Short-term Moving Average Crossovers – This is the money sucker of the century. When the shorter term moving average cross the longer term moving average it only means that the average price in the short run is equal to the average price in the longer run. For the life of me I cannot understand why this is bullish or bearish. Easy to set up on software, complete with lights, bells and whistles, and good for the seller getting thousands for the software but in terms of creating profit it’s a zero.

37) Stochastic – Another money sucker. Personally I think this indicator is used backwards; when it first signals an overdone condition that’s when I think the big spike in the “overdone” currency pair occurs. To be overbought means strong and oversold means weak. Try buying on the first sign of overbought and selling on the first sign of oversold; you’ll be with the trend and likely have identified a move with plenty of juice left. So if %k and %d are both crossing 80; buy! (Same on sell side; sell at 20)

38) Wrong Broker – A lot of FOREX brokers are horrible; get a good one. Read forums and chats in several different places to get an unbiased opinion.

39) Simulated Results – Watch out for “black box” systems; these are trading systems that don’t divulge how the trade signals are generated. Great majority of them are absolute garbage. They show you a track record of extraordinary results but think about it; if you could build a trading system with half a dozen filters using the benefit of hindsight, couldn’t you too come up with a great system. Of course going forward is an entirely different story. High-speed number crunching capabilities allows for building great hindsight trading systems; BEWARE.

40) Inconsistency – Every business (FOREX trading included) requires a business plan (trading plan). Unless you have taken the time to write down a set of rules that you can and will follow, it’s likely your trading will remain unfocused and directionless. Make a plan, have rules, follow them set goals that are realistic and you will achieve them.

41) Master of None – Focus on one currency for technical trading; each currency has a unique way of trading and unless you get intimate with it you will never truly understand its underlying idiosyncrasies. Don’t spread yourself too thin – focus – master one currency at a time.

42) Thinking Long Term – Don’t do it. Stay in the moment. Especially if you’re a day trader. It doesn’t matter what happens next week or next month, if your trading with 30 to 50 point stops restrict your thought process to what’s happening right now. That is not to stay the long-term trend is not important; it is to say the long-term trend will not always help you when your trading a significantly shorter time frame.

43) Overconfidence – Trading is not easy; statistics show 95% failure rate. If your doing well don’t take your success for granted; always be on the lookout for ways to improve what you’re doing.

44) Getting Pumped Up – The trick is to maintain an even keel; when you are in a trade you want to think exactly as you would if you didn’t have a trade on. To do this requires a relaxed disposition; this is not a football game; don’t get psyched up; relax and try to enjoy it.

45) Staying in the Game – I don’t recommend demo trading because traders learn bad habits when trading with play money. I also don’t think “letting it all hang out” right away is wise either. Start off doing trades and taking risk that is relatively small but still makes a difference to you if you win or lose; about a quarter to a third of what you expect to reach as your trading matures is reasonable.


Retired proven professional Bank FOREX trader with over 20 years of hands-on FOREX trading experience.

Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.eurusdtrader.com
  • Post #2
  • Quote
  • Nov 19, 2006 12:19pm Nov 19, 2006 12:19pm
  •  Isotonic
  • Joined Jul 2005 | Status: Member | 974 Posts
out of all the forex "list of points" articles here - i think this is probably the best one by miles.

good man, jimmy!
 
 
  • Post #3
  • Quote
  • Nov 19, 2006 6:18pm Nov 19, 2006 6:18pm
  •  FXopportunist
  • | Joined Jul 2006 | Status: Pay the man ! ! | 912 Posts
very good stuff
Profit is where readiness meets Opportunity
 
 
  • Post #4
  • Quote
  • Nov 19, 2006 8:55pm Nov 19, 2006 8:55pm
  •  accrete
  • Joined Jan 2006 | Status: Pips Ahoy! | 1,130 Posts
This list was a real thinker for me. I've seen lists before but many of the items here were real whacks on the side of the head and got me rethinking some of what i've been taught.

: ) Thom
 
 
  • Post #5
  • Quote
  • Nov 20, 2006 6:38pm Nov 20, 2006 6:38pm
  •  et_phonehome_2
  • | Joined May 2006 | Status: Member | 809 Posts
Very good points given. Anyone who read this, do any of you actually use two indicators or less to trade? If so, let me know, my charts are overloaded as it is, not so good to have so many. I would like to know what indicators or system you use....
 
 
  • Post #6
  • Quote
  • Nov 24, 2006 1:02pm Nov 24, 2006 1:02pm
  •  PipSteve
  • | Joined Nov 2006 | Status: Pipaholic | 342 Posts
This is hanging on my wall now!! Great stuff. Thank you.
Steve
 
 
  • Post #7
  • Quote
  • Nov 24, 2006 2:33pm Nov 24, 2006 2:33pm
  •  hondakorn
  • | Joined Jun 2006 | Status: Passing Bogified Documents | 278 Posts
thanks!! def learned alot!!
CRAIGSLIST BARTERING CHAMPION
 
 
  • Post #8
  • Quote
  • Nov 24, 2006 2:46pm Nov 24, 2006 2:46pm
  •  steviet
  • Joined Jun 2006 | Status: Member | 2,512 Posts
This is probably one of the best articles I've read on the market. Thanks for posting.

Kind Regards
Steve
 
 
  • Post #9
  • Quote
  • Nov 24, 2006 3:05pm Nov 24, 2006 3:05pm
  •  mp777
  • | Joined Feb 2006 | Status: Member | 151 Posts
Excellent work Jimmy - plenty food for thought, thanks.


M
Yorkshire - UK
 
 
  • Post #10
  • Quote
  • Nov 25, 2006 3:04am Nov 25, 2006 3:04am
  •  Warmagus
  • | Joined Sep 2006 | Status: Member | 331 Posts
Screen time matters.
How you act is more important than how you feel.
 
 
  • Post #11
  • Quote
  • Nov 25, 2006 8:24pm Nov 25, 2006 8:24pm
  •  zawodowiec
  • | Joined Aug 2006 | Status: Member | 307 Posts
Thanks for posting the list, excellent stuff!
 
 
  • Post #12
  • Quote
  • Nov 25, 2006 9:39pm Nov 25, 2006 9:39pm
  •  ChucksIn
  • | Joined Sep 2006 | Status: Member | 20 Posts
Thank you for posting Jimmy's 45 ways to avoid losing money trading FOREX. Will refer to it often.

Cb2
 
 
  • Post #13
  • Quote
  • Nov 29, 2006 1:33pm Nov 29, 2006 1:33pm
  •  aasa0076
  • | Joined Sep 2006 | Status: Member | 19 Posts
Hey, very good article but i don't agree with the last point, cos i can see traders now don't even know how to look at the chat...or testing any strategy... so when they get profit after losing thousands

good luck trading

Abdel
 
 
  • Post #14
  • Quote
  • Nov 27, 2008 3:56pm Nov 27, 2008 3:56pm
  •  privatansasa
  • | Joined Oct 2008 | Status: disciplined mystic - learner of FX | 39 Posts
Certainly a slightly different take on the usually shallow Top List . Some of the things I would never have thought about!

very wise

I want to know Jimmy Young!
 
 
  • Post #15
  • Quote
  • Jan 12, 2009 3:03pm Jan 12, 2009 3:03pm
  •  ezzat
  • | Joined Jan 2009 | Status: Member | 20 Posts
This is a nice article. I hope everybody reads it.
I love Forex.
 
 
  • Post #16
  • Quote
  • Jan 12, 2009 3:48pm Jan 12, 2009 3:48pm
  •  TJPLD
  • Joined Jan 2008 | Status: Inertial Member | 2,297 Posts
Funny thing is I figured out excatly what he said after about 1 year.
If you are a complete n00b and heard about FX just yesterday this will probably not help you much. You will make these mistakes anyway.
After that you might learn something. Maybe not.
Reading something does not make you an Expert. An Expert is someone
who has made every single mistake you can imagine.
 
1
  • Post #17
  • Quote
  • Jan 15, 2009 12:31pm Jan 15, 2009 12:31pm
  •  gspajon
  • | Commercial Member | Joined Jan 2007 | 1,063 Posts
GREAT article!!

This is like a "go live" check list.
 
 
  • Post #18
  • Quote
  • Sep 7, 2009 10:48pm Sep 7, 2009 10:48pm
  •  Rana
  • | Joined Sep 2009 | Status: Trader | 19 Posts
Excellent article.....
Success is a journey not a destination...!!
 
 
  • Post #19
  • Quote
  • Sep 30, 2009 11:39am Sep 30, 2009 11:39am
  •  angelpip
  • | Joined Sep 2009 | Status: Junior Member | 1 Post
Hi Jimmy

I have printed out your pointers and actually have it sticked in front of my computer just to remind me not to make any losing trades again.

Thanks!

Angelpip
 
 
  • Post #20
  • Quote
  • Dec 29, 2009 2:42am Dec 29, 2009 2:42am
  •  Trade4Food
  • | Joined Dec 2009 | Status: Junior Member | 2 Posts
I just printed these out too. Really got me thinking and I know I'll refer to this list a lot...probably several times per day, lol. Thanks for sharing this!
 
 
  • Trading Discussion
  • /
  • 45 Ways to Avoid Losing Money Trading FOREX, by Jimmy Young
  • Reply to Thread
    • Page 1 2 3
    • Page 1 2 3
0 traders viewing now
  • More
Top of Page
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
About FF
  • Mission
  • Products
  • User Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Blog
  • Contact
FF Products
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Trade Explorer
FF Website
  • Homepage
  • Search
  • Members
  • Report a Bug
Follow FF
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

FF Sister Sites:

  • Metals Mine
  • Energy EXCH
  • Crypto Craft

Forex Factory® is a brand of Fair Economy, Inc.

Terms of Service / ©2023