About Forex Trading

The Top-Three Mistakes FOREX Traders Make




About Forex

The Forex market has quickly become the world's largest financial market, with an estimate daily turnover of $3.2 trillion. It is a market that has great appeal to a financial trader because of its volume which guarantees liquidity.
High liquidity means that a trader can trade whatever currencies he feels like at all times, since there will always be someone to buy and sell any currency he wants. Another outstanding feature of the forex market is that it is active 24 hours a day and is closed only on the weekends. 


This means that unlike the stock market for example, traders in the forex market don't need to wait for a bell to ring, but can make trading decisions around the clock. Enter the internet into the equation. Now the forex market is literally at your fingertips. Most brokers offer online trading facilities which enable you to trade simply by clicking a button, instead of the traditional phone call. The internet has really revolutionized the industry, making the retail section of the market more dominant than ever.



MISTAKE # 1
PAPER TRADING TOO LONG


Paper trading is hypothetical trading. If you have never traded anything before, you wil probably
do some paper trading. The benefit of paper trading is that it wil help the new trader become
acquainted with the basics of interfacing with the markets. This is often a “demo” account with a broker or clearing firm that provides real-time market data but provides a hypothetical balance. You are al owed to buy and sel as much as you want, just like in a “live” or “real” account. Your hypothetical gains and losses are accrued against your hypothetical account balance over time. As time goes on, most traders find that they can gain quite a surprising amount of paper-profits in a very short period of time. These traders are now completely convinced that they can easily duplicate those hypothetical results in real time with real money. They open their real trading account and POW! Within about three to four weeks they are down usual y more than 50% of their equity. This is not my opinion—this is actual fact. Ask any broker in the industry what happens to “paper-traders” who open a real account. The ratio of “paper-traders” to “winning traders” is about one in ninety. Why does this happen? Because there was never any real risk to the trader. Let me il ustrate by tel ing you a story:
I am a private pilot. I soloed on my 17th birthday. In 1979 I was an Air Force academy appointee.
I have flown a T-38 Jet fighter in extreme conditions. Just knowing that, I think most people
would agree that I probably have a certain amount of experience flying airplanes.
Here in the suburbs outside of Chicago there is a smal airport that has a “Fighter Pilot for a
Day” program. This is where you fly co-pilot with a retired military pilot in high-performance
aircraft. You are al owed to fly the aircraft (with the real pilot’s hands on the controls) in an
attempt to “shoot down” an “enemy” fighter; which is another co-pilot flying another airplane with
HIS retired military pilot. You are awarded a “kil ” if your laser guns hit your opponent. It’s like a
very expensive high-stakes game of laser-tag.
I went for a day to have some fun. As it turned out, I was flying against a complete novice. Of
course, I didn’t tel him I had some Air Force training. I asked my adversary what kind of training
he had. He very confidently told me that he was the top scoring “ace” from his on-line club and
various other national methods of playing of high-tech video games. He told me that he could
“out-fly” almost anyone in the Microsoft Flight Simulator in both the F-16 Falcon and F-15 Eagle.


I agreed that his credentials were very impressive and proceeded to blow him out of the sky no
less than six times in 20 minutes. To start with, this novice had never flown in aerobatic
conditions so he spent most of his time trying not to throw-up. He stal ed and spun most of the
other time. If he wasn’t flying with someone he’d be dead. In the end he had to quit early
because he simply couldn’t take the physical punishment. To add insult to injury, I have never
played Microsoft Flight Simulator (ever). I do the real thing. BIG DIFFERENCE between the two
as you can see.
Do you see the point I’m getting at? PRETENDING to do something is never the same as
actual y doing it. Yes, it is helpful up to a certain point to simulate certain things but that can only
take you so far. In the case of air-to-air combat, PRETENDING to be a fighter pilot will likely get
you kil ed if you ACTUALLY go up against a trained fighter pilot. In fact, the US Army Air Corps
learned this the hard way back in WWI. They sent young men into combat with oftentimes less
than 10 hours of actual flying time. Imagine how fast those men were kil ed when they went
man-to-man with Richthofen, Boelke and Immelmann. Everyone concluded flying was
“dangerous” when in fact it was the lack of training that was “dangerous”


I’m not trying to impress you with my flying skil s. I’m trying to impress on you that paper-trading
is exactly like playing Microsoft Flight Simulator. It is pretending to be something you are not
while convincing you that you know what you are doing. Paper trading hides from you the need
for real skil s. Paper-trading wil get you kil ed because when you go up against real traders with real money it’s not a game anymore. If you make the wrong move you lose equity. There is no “do over” button. If you stal your F-16 in the simulator, you get another chance; stal your F-16 in combat and you die. Lose money in your paper-trading account; just sign up for another trial account. Lose money in your real account and you go home broke.


Paper-trading is a waste of time because paper-trading will never give you the real skil s you
need to trade. Al paper-trading can do is help you learn how to use the functions of your trading
platform. In fact, that is a good thing. But once you learn the functions of your platform and your
account is ready to trade, everything you learned paper-trading goes out the window because


NOW IT IS DO OR DIE. There are no second chances.
Don’t make mistake #1; don’t think you know what you are doing because you pretended to
trade without taking any real risk.


HOW TO MAKE THIS MISTAKE WORSE: Continue paper-trading for more than 30 days
and/or go back to paper-trading if you have lost money in your first real account.


SOLUTION: Open the absolute smal est account your broker will al ow and trade for 90 days
the absolute smal est size possible. If you are ahead, increase your equity size and your trade
size by a factor of 20%. If you are losing, stay with the real thing; it’s the only way to learn.



MISTAKE # 2
NOT HAVING A TRADING PLAN


Suppose you cal ed your 401K manager this afternoon. Suppose you asked him “What is your
plan for the next six months?” Suppose he told you “Oh—whatever. I just try to get on the right
side and if I don’t I just get out”
How long would that guy be managing your retirement money if you had any say in the matter?
Many traders take the same attitude with their daily work habit and many don’t even know they
do it. Not having a clear and concise plan for your daily trading presence is a serious mistake
and you need to address it. The best way to describe a sound plan is to let you read one from a

professional ful -time trader. This is an actual trade plan form a friend of mine who is an E-mini
trader:



My goal is to earn 100% on my trading equity before the end of the year. To maintain my focus I wil set
a near term goal every quarter to be at a 25% gain and I wil plot my equity daily. If I reach my quarterly
goal ahead of the last trading day of the quarter I wil take a two-day break. I wil hold any open
positions that are at a profit but any open trade losses I wil close at that point before I take a break.
If my open trade gains continue into the new quarter I wil add to those winning positions by a factor of
25%. I wil move my protective stops up to reduce my exposure on the entire position.
If I am behind on my trade goal for the quarter, I wil take a five-day break. I wil re-evaluate my trade
system and ask the question: “Has my market quality changed to something my system is not able to
perform at best?”
During the year I wil not trade more than three markets. I have learned I cannot focus wel on more than
three markets at a time.
If I have more than four losing trades in a row in any of my three markets I wil take a trading break for
five days. Again, I wil leave open position winners alone in the other markets but close al losing
positions. I wil again rol protective stops to reduce my risk.
When I take a trading break, I wil enter resting limit orders in the open trade winners to take the
objective profit should I be unavailable and the market gets to those levels during my break.
If I am ahead of my plan for the year at any point I wil take a break. I wil take 30% of the new equity
out of my account and place that into a secure place. If I am behind I wil not add equity under any
circumstances. If I reach a 40% drawdown from my high equity I wil quit for the year.
I wil record my daily trade activity in my trading log and review this weekly. I wil know my ratios and
results; I wil look to improve them by 5% each week.
I wil trade only from the bul side because my analysis tel s me that al three of the markets I have
selected have more than a year of solid bul ish fundamentals. I wil learn how to use options this year
because I see from last year I could have protected more trades if I had a solid grasp of when to use
options and when not to. I wil invest two-hours a week on option knowledge.
My son is leaving for Europe in May. I wil not trade the week before he leaves or the week after. I plan
to join him in the fal for Oktoberfest for one week and wil not trade the three days before I leave or
when I get back. I know I suffer from jet-lag so the week after I am back I am not at my best. I have
blocked out these times on my trade calendar so I wil not be tempted to trade anyway.
If you read between the lines you will notice that his trade plan included al the things that were
in his control—NOT things outside of his control; like the markets. If you want to get serious
about writing a solid trading plan pick up a copy of my first book Trading Rules That Work: the



28 essential lessons every trader must master (Wiley & Sons Publishing, October 2006). I also
teach about trading plans in my daily broadcasts and in my Psychology of Trading course.
Please see my website for details.


HOW TO MAKE THIS MISTAKE WORSE: Base your trading plan on hypothetical profits or on how wel you did paper-trading, Ignore your personal emotional needs when compiling a plan, Ignore your family while making a plan, keep thinking you can trade everyday or al the time, average your potential over a period of time and think results will equal a daily amount.


SOLUTION: Ask a professional trader to show you his daily/weekly/monthly or annual trading
plan. Ask yourself if you can make a plan that addresses similar things. If the professional you
have selected can’t show you or won’t show you his plan then ignore what he has to say. If he
isn’t using a plan then he is likely unable to assist you in building wealth. There are resources
for writing trade plans on my site; please use them.










MISTAKE # 3
TRADING TOO LARGE FOR YOUR ACCOUNT


The fastest way to go broke is to bet it al —al the time. Most traders don’t learn this lesson until
they have had at least one blow-out; by that I mean they have lost al their equity quickly and
have had to start over.
For some reason, there is a tendency for traders of al age and experience levels to trade too
large for the actual cash in their account. This is a symptom of a larger problem and unless you
are wil ing to consider that you personal y might have this problem already you most likely will
be trading too large for your account right now today.
What is this larger problem?
GREED, BABY—GREED
It is unrealistic for you to believe you are going to make a kil ing on THIS ONE TRADE RIGHT
NOW. Sure, you might be on the right side of a large move but that wil take time and evidence
to see. For this moment, any trade you have on has the potential to run the other way against
you and if you are trading too large, your potential to lose a lot on only a few trades is huge. No
matter your age, education, skil or experience level you are not going to make 100% winning
trades. Therefore a certain percentage of your trades will simply not work. Those trades cannot
be so large that you lose a significant portion of your equity in the process.
To beat the greed habit you need to make a few changes to both your equity management and
more importantly to your thinking.
First, trading is a business. You need to treat it like one. There are certain things every business
needs to run effectively and the first thing is liquidity. Simply put, if you run out of cash to play
you can’t remain open.
Second, if you had a reasonable plan in place already then it is a good guess that your plan
cal s for only a reasonable amount of percent gain on your equity regularly. If you were to use
some basic mathematics while creating a sound trading approach one of the things you would
be looking for was a realistic “risk-to-reward” ratio. That means for every dol ar you lose you expect to make a certain number of dol ars and out of every 100 trades a certain percent wil be
winners and some wil be losers.
If you put this al together and asked the “what-if?” questions you get this base-line number that
statistical y wil be a winning set of results:
42% winning trades out of 100 taken
Two dol ars out for every dol ar you give back
This is not my opinion, this is the Probability of Ruin Matrix and you can research it yourself if
you have time. Of course, if you have higher percentages of winners and take more out on
those winners you make money a lot faster but the point is if your results are at least this good
consistently you are on your way to success. I teach more about that in Trading Rules that
Work and in my Psychology of Trading course.
It’s great to be on the high side of the matrix but most of us didn’t start there and that is why you
have to TRADE SMALL at first. To protect yourself from being greedy about your trading and to
help you stay focused on long-term success it is important to make your trade size smal
enough so that it won’t leave you in a position of not being able to play at al should you have a
string of losses al at once. I found that limiting your risk/reward ratio to a factor of about 1.5%
on any one trade is a great way to stay focused and not get greedy.
This means that for any one trade you take, no matter how you think of the trade or how certain
you are of a win; you wil not risk more than 1.5% of your account balance at any one time. This
means that if you are trading so that your average loss is 3-5% of your account balance at any
one time—you are trading TWO to THREE TIMES TOO LARGE for your account size. In that
case, the Probability of Ruin Matrix wil work against you and you wil likely run out of capital
before you make money with your approach.
If you are the greedy trader right now and you are guilty of making this mistake; If this means
you have to drop your trading size down a few notches then you had better cal your broker
today and fix it—because if you don’t you are an accident waiting to happen. It only takes
making this mistake THREE TIMES IN A ROW to drop your account balance 15% or more in aheartbeat; especially if you are day trading!


HOW TO MAKE THIS MISTAKE WORSE: Convince yourself you are so good at trading that
this couldn’t possibly happen to you, convince yourself that your analysis is good enough to help
you find 80-90% winning trades all the time, trade without a stop-loss order “just this once”,
double-up on the next trade after taking a large loss.


SOLUTION: Immediately reduce your account balance; take 20-30% of your cash home. Trade
position sizes that are no more than 300% as valuable as your account balance. In other words,
if your account size is $10,000, don’t trade anything that has a total contract value larger than
around $30,000. If that means trading mini’s instead of big-board you had better do it.








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