(James Dicks) Forex Trading Secrets Trading Strat (BookFi) PDF
(James Dicks) Forex Trading Secrets Trading Strat (BookFi) PDF
TRADING
SECRETS
TRADING STRATEGIES
FOR THE FOREX MARKET
JAMES DICKS
ISBN: 978-0-07-174709-7
MHID: 0-07-174709-5
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To be successful you have to have a mentor. Someone who can inspire you,
someone that will listen to you, someone that will give you sound advice
whether you want to hear it or not. If you don’t have a mentor, that some-
one to help you get to the top, then keep looking. For me it’s My Uncle
Jack. I know there were many times that he felt I was not listening but
I always was. Thanks for everything you do, this book is dedicated you.
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Contents
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Disclaimer xv
Introduction xvii
v
vi CONTENTS
CONCLUSION 269
APPENDIX 273
GLOSSARY 289
BIBLIOGRAPHY 299
INDEX 301
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Preface
There are many books on the market that cover the subject of FOREX trad-
ing. But I believe that until now, there has never been a book on this unique
topic that has so vividly described the subject of the FOREX—a universe
completely of its own. The FOREX market is an anonymous entity that
bears many faces, and each individual who participates in it leaves a foot-
print that just might change the course of their personal circumstances
based on their individual hopes and dreams for success.
This book was written with several purposes in mind. First of all, this
book is designed to inform and educate the potential FOREX trader about
a field that is growing exponentially around the world and is reaching mil-
lions of individuals from all walks of life. It is a market that was reserved
for a select few just a decade ago but now is in the hands of anyone, even
those without a formal financial education. For this reason, it is very
important to include a qualified point of view from a real trader’s perspec-
tive, a trader who has already traveled through all the steps and experienced
numerous pitfalls but now wants to share this information with you to help
you avoid or, at the very least, minimize any potential negative impact
through education and solid money management techniques.
This book also is intended to provide an overview of all the fundamen-
tals involved in the FOREX and of the trading process so that any new
trader can easily obtain all the tools needed to ensure a quick start. It is also
aimed at the intermediate trader who has already started the process but
could use some guidance and additional tools, with an emphasis on the
importance of a solid money management program and the right mind-set
to develop a successful trading career.
Written from the insider’s perspective of an experienced FOREX trader
who has gone through every step until reaching a stable and consistent
success, this book is focused on pointing out the potential hazards that
every trader will encounter at some point. In the beginning, it will offer
xi
xii PREFACE
solutions to help you understand how to mitigate many of the risks involved
by centering on dedicated attention to the preliminary preparation, educa-
tion, and training needed to become a true professional in this field.
The overview includes a history of the FOREX and its basics, as well
as a thorough description of all the fundamental, technical, and psycholog-
ical aspects and how they merge and interact in the market’s behavior.
Finally, some of the preferred trading systems are described in detail
and discussed as additional elements to help you practice and build your
trading toolbox.
I hope that you will enjoy this book and its concepts. May it bring you
a step closer to becoming a consistent winner and an educated and confi-
dent FOREX trader.
Acknowledgments
As you so often read on the acknowledgments page, the author takes a few
brief lines to say thanks. A page of appreciation is in nearly every book and
this one is no different; primarily because a project like this is just impos-
sible to successfully complete without the combined effort of an entire
team. For me I must give thanks first.
xiii
xiv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
project. Michael Thomas has done his fair share of reading of this book and
his specific attention to the FOREX strategies will have the reader’s appre-
ciation and understanding. Thanks for all your help and friendship. I would
like to give a special thanks to Caroline for her help in getting this project
moving and off the ground.
Finally and certainly not least, thanks to my publisher McGraw-Hill and
the entire team for their dedication of getting this book to you.
Disclaimer
The information in this book is for educational purposes only. I am not giv-
ing advice or specific financial recommendations. You must seek guidance
from your personal advisors before acting on this information. Trading can
result in losses. I accept no responsibility for any losses you may incur.
Do not invest more than you can afford to lose.
xv
xvi DISCLAIMER
possibility exists that you could sustain a total loss of your initial margin
funds and be required to deposit additional funds to maintain your position.
If you fail to meet any margin call within the time prescribed, your position
will be liquidated, and you will be responsible for any resulting losses.
Investors may lower their exposure to risk by employing risk-reducing
strategies such as stop-loss and limit orders.
xvii
xviii INTRODUCTION
as the Interbank. In this way, central banks are able to exchange and
convert their currencies one into another in real time. The currencies that
are traded most commonly are the U.S. dollar, the Japanese yen, the euro,
the British pound, the Swiss franc, the Canadian dollar, and the Australian
dollar. The Interbank’s activity being continuous, and thanks to decentral-
ization from any physical location or exchange, access to real quotes and
the speed at which transactions can be performed are greatly increased.
When you are transacting on the FOREX market, you are simultane-
ously buying one currency and selling another. Currencies are always
traded in pairs, for example, pound sterling/U.S. dollar (GBP/USD) or U.S.
dollar/Canadian dollar (USD/CAD).
You would be executing a trade when there is an expectation that the
currency you are buying increases in respect to the one you are selling. If
the value of the currency you have bought effectively increases, you then
would sell the position and take a profit. Currency pairs are composed of
a base currency, which is the first on the quote, and a counter currency
(also called the quote or payment currency), which appears as second
on the quote. When the U.S. dollar is the base currency, quotes are given in
$1 USD per counter currency, for example USD/CAD or USD/JPY.
The role of the FOREX in the world economy is very important
because there is always an increasing need of currency exchange owing to
the development of technology, communications, and general international
commerce. Countries need the FOREX market to be able to sell their prod-
ucts to other countries and receive payment in their own currency or pay for
their imported goods to the foreign producer in its own currency.
In addition to commercial turnover, though, plenty of money is used
for speculation, and thus the great liquidity of the FOREX allows traders
to profit at any moment, provided they are using the right techniques and
strategies.
Over the last few years, the FOREX market has gained significant
ground in the U.S. retail marketplace. Through my many Web sites, such as
the James Dicks FOREX Network (www.JamesDicks.com), educational
tools and services, I have introduced millions of individual investors to the
retail FOREX marketplace.
The CNBC “Million-Dollar Portfolio Challenge” is well known among
retail investors. To see firsthand how exciting, how popular, and how big
the FOREX market is getting, just check out the results of the past chal-
lenges. The winner and top investors all dominated the challenge, trading
the FOREX.
P
1
A R T
THE BASICS
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C H
1
A P T E R
3
4 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
micro account may be a good way to get your feet wet, so to speak, by trad-
ing real money before moving on to a more standard size account. Micro
accounts require as little as $25 to open and be able to control $1000 units.
The pip values, on average, are about $0.10 (10 cents).
You can always go to www.JamesDicks.com to see what brokers I use.
The FOREX is able to maintain its objectivity and avoid being con-
trolled or manipulated by one or few of its participants because the volume
transacted is so high that if any of them would want to do so, by changing
prices at will, they would have to operate with tens of billions of dollars.
This is the reason why the FOREX can’t be influenced by any single par-
ticipant, and even though there are situations where a huge transaction can
seem to take control of the market for a few moments, the balance is estab-
lished again almost immediately because of the great liquidity involved.
This also allows traders to get a profit by opening and closing positions
within a few seconds.
The FOREX market is always moving. You can chose to maintain a
position for a very short time or for longer periods, even years; it will
depend only on your own trading strategies.
In the FOREX, it is possible to perform speculative activities without
the need for a real money supply. This is referred to as marginal trading.
The amount required as a guarantee for the transaction is low, thus provid-
ing an opportunity to open positions with a small account in U.S. dollars
(some local brokers also accept some of the main currencies, such as
the euro, pound sterling, Japanese yen, etc.) and buy or sell a lot of other
different currencies.
Transactions can be conducted very quickly and yield a profit while the
exchange rates go up or down. Marginal trading implies operating with
borrowed capital, where you need only a small percentage of the total sum
of the transaction.
For example, you have analyzed the situation in the market and have
come to the conclusion that the euro will go up against the dollar. You open
1 lot for buying the euro (EUR) with a margin of 1 percent (1:100 leverage)
at the price of 1.2750 dollars per euro (the margin needed will be $1275)
and wait for the exchange rate to go up. Sometime later, you see that your
analysis was right. You close the position at 1.2827 and earn 77 pips ($770).
Most currencies have a daily range of fluctuation of about 100 to 150
pips on average, some even more. This gives FOREX traders the opportu-
nity to make money on these changes.
There are several tools that allow the trader to be able to understand
and make decisions on the market, grouped basically under fundamental or
6 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
The FOREX market is always open. Like some supermarkets that are
open 24 hours, the FOREX is a “supermarket” of currencies,
open 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. The FOREX opens in most of
the brokers on Sunday at 3 to 5 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) and stays
open until Friday at 4 p.m. EST (it must be borne in mind that the
opening and closing—Sunday and Friday—may vary from broker
to broker). In this way, traders have the ability to operate either in
the American, Asian, or European markets, which gives them the
advantage of being able to react to certain events or news that is
bound to emerge and also gives them the opportunity to decide
their schedules.
No commission is charged. Most brokers do not charge additional
fees or commissions to buy or sell currencies, whether online or
by telephone. This is so because of the use of a fixed spread that
is consistent and transparent. The cost of a buy/sell in the FOREX
market is much lower than in any other market (e.g., stock,
futures, etc.). A side note to this is that because of the competition
for narrower spreads and faster executions, some brokers are
providing very tight spreads and extremely fast execution with
little latency. In order for them to do this, however, they are now
starting to charge commissions. The commissions vary, and with
a little due diligence, you will be able to find just the right broker.
Orders are executed instantly. In normal market conditions, the
execution of orders at a given price is done instantly. The trader
places the order at the quoted price, which is being updated in
real time. There is no difference between the price shown by the
broker and the price at which the purchase order is executed.
There are special conditions, though, in which market volatility is
such that orders can be delayed or requoted, but under normal
conditions, there are no such delays.
There are no restrictions on short selling. Unlike the stock market,
the FOREX has no restrictions to open sell positions (short). In the
FOREX, there is a chance to buy or sell regardless of whether the
market is bullish or bearish. Owing to the fact that in the FOREX
there is always someone buying a currency and selling another at
8 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
2 P T E R
MAJOR CURRENCIES
AND PAIRS
11
12 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
THE EURO
The euro (or EUR) is the base or quote currency with the following FOREX
major and crossed-rate currency pairs: EUR/USD, EUR/JPY, EUR/GBP,
EUR/CHF, EUR/AUD, EUR/CAD, and EUR/NZD. Additionally, the EUR
is the base currency and is paired with the following currencies: NOK, SEK,
SGD, DKK, CNY, MXN, BRL, ZAR, and other exotic currencies depend-
ing on each broker’s availability.
The euro is the currency that is actually used in most member countries
of the European Union. It was created in 1999 and implemented in 2002
and represents the result of the most important monetary reform on the
entire continent. It was designed with the intent of rendering free trade eas-
ier between the members of the Euro zone, aiming at the same time for a
political integration. The EUR/USD currency pair is nicknamed “fiber,”
and this is said to come from the fact that the Euro zone comprises the
greatest optical fiber network in the world. Its market volatility used to be
low, but it has been seen to increase to medium in the recent months.
The European Central Bank (ECB) and the other central banks of every
member country manage the currency through the European System of
Central Banks (ESCB). The ECB is the only authority that has the power to
set monetary policy, whereas the issuing and distribution of notes and coins
are done by the other members of the ESCB. All the decisions and proce-
dures among the members of the European Union are based on agreements
between its member countries. Adoption of the euro has allowed the Euro
zone to become the largest economy in the world. This actually makes it a
stronger currency than the U.S. dollar.
The economy of the United Kingdom is one of the largest in the world,
with a strong agriculture and mining industry. The services sector repre-
sents the main percentage of the gross domestic product, and tourism has
been developing strongly in recent years.
The weakness of the currency has been maintained over the years as a
protection for the local manufacturing and export industries; however, the
JPY has been experiencing a rising trend that has diverted some foreign
investments to other countries, where much lower costs still can be found.
The most important index of Japan’s economy is the industrial production
index, which is strongly correlated with the export index.
GOLD CFDS
Metals, and most particularly gold, are usually traded through the futures
market or gold exploration stocks. More recently, introduction into the
markets of contracts for difference (CFDs) has allowed traders to have
CHAPTER 2 MAJOR CURRENCIES AND PAIRS 17
CRUDE OIL
The price of crude oil is influenced directly by OPEC (Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries), which is made up of 12 nations whose
economies depend on oil export revenues. The fluctuation in prices is
related to production quotas that are imposed by this organization. The
final prices that consumers pay for oil products are determined by several
components: supply and demand, effective production, refinery costs, and
taxes on oil, which can vary greatly depending on country.
Crude oil is traded on the market as a commodity through futures and
spot markets as well as CFDs.
to be much wider than on most majors, for example, the most liquid pairs,
such as EUR/USD and USD/JPY. This can be a disadvantage because it
increases the trading risks, but some of them can represent a very inter-
esting option, such as the GBP/JPY pair, precisely because of its high
volatility.
SWEDISH KRONA
The Swedish krona (SEK) is the official currency of Sweden. Its volatil-
ity is evaluated as medium to high mostly owing to the wide extent of for-
eign trade, where it constantly depends on the economic status of other
currencies. Sweden is a member of the European Union, but it didn’t
adopt the euro and instead maintains its local currency as official. The
country shows a low and stable inflation rate, and its economy is mostly
based on exports, especially in the areas of information technology and
telecommunications.
CHAPTER 2 MAJOR CURRENCIES AND PAIRS 19
NORWEGIAN KRONE
The Norwegian krone (NOK) is the official currency of Norway. The coun-
try is one of the largest exporters of oil, and increases in the demand for oil
have injected a great deal of money into its economy, making it very depen-
dent on fluctuations in oil prices, however. The volatility of the currency
itself is low.
The economy of Norway is more service-oriented, and the country is
involved in a great number of offshore activities. It is a small country with
a small population, but it is one of the wealthiest countries in Europe.
Other exotic currencies you can find are the Danish krone (DKK) and
The Singapore dollar (SGD) with low volatility, the Mexican peso (MXN)
and the Brazilian real (BRL) with low to medium volatility, and the South
African rand (ZAR) with medium volatility.
3 P T E R
FOREX 101
You’ve probably heard or read about bid and ask or bid and offer. What are
those? Price quotes for a currency pair are double, one for buying and the
other for selling. The difference between the two prices is called the spread,
which will be discussed later on.
As a side note, the opposite is meant when using the same word in a
news release. For example, when there is a considerable number of pend-
ing orders awaiting for the price to reach a lower value to buy, it is said
that there are many bids on the market, but when sellers have pending
orders at a certain price higher, it is said that there are many offers sitting
at that price.
This happens because the bid price is actually the end-value price of a
long position, which is purchased at the ask price to allow for the spread to
be paid. The same occurs in the inverse situation; the end-value price of a
short position is the actual offer price, and it is purchased at the bid price,
so the spread is paid at the moment the particular position is closed.
OPENING A POSITION
The reason for trading the FOREX market is to make money and to diver-
sify your current portfolio. You do this through the positions you take by
21
22 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
One is said to be long in one currency when we buy it and short in that
currency when we sell it. Long, or buy, positions use the offer or ask price
of the quotes. For example, if you acquire one lot of GBP/USD at a rate of
1.4722 bid/1.4727 ask, this means that you’ll be buying 100,000 GBP units
at 1.4727 USD. Short, or sell, positions use the bid price of the quotes.
Thus, in the preceding situation, we would be selling 100,000 GBP units at
1.4722 USD.
Trading currency pairs is simultaneous and symmetrical; this implies
that we will always be long in one currency and short in another at the same
time. In the previous example, if we exchange those 100,000 GBP units at
1.47220 USD, we will be short in pounds sterling and long in U.S. dollars.
A position that is running and active will be called an open position. Its
value will change depending on fluctuations in market rates. Profits and
losses will be influence the margin account but will not be official until the
position has been closed.
TRADING ON MARGIN
Trading on margin is equivalent to borrowing money from a bank or a bro-
ker to purchase a particular security or currency pair. The margin needed
depends on the leverage offered by the financial institution and represents
the guarantee needed to control a certain quantity of units.
For example, when using a 100:1 leverage, the trader controls a $100,000
lot with only $1000 on margin in the account. Smaller lot sizes of $10,000
may be controlled with only $100 on margin.
Higher-leveraged accounts may allow control of greater amounts of
money in the market with less margin, but this also can be dangerous when
losses are experienced. A lower margin requirement can induce the trader
to risk more than is wise. I will discuss leverage and true leverage in detail
in Chapter 6.
MANAGING A POSITION
The position can be set up from the start of the trade, with its individual
stop-loss and target-profit levels, or it can be managed as it develops. Set-
ting and trailing the stops, balancing partial profits, and shifting entry prices
in pending stop or limit orders are other ways of managing your trades.
24 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
CLOSING A POSITION
A position will be closed automatically when it reaches either the target-
profit or stop-loss set price resulting in a loss. Positions also can be closed
manually through specific controls on the platform or by calling the broker
directly. When you close a position manually, you are subject to the same
conditions as when opening at market price, such as requotes if the prices
have changed.
Positions also can be closed by opening a matching and opposite trade
in the same currency pair (a limit order, a stop-loss order, or simply a mar-
ket order can be used). For example, if you have gone long in one lot of
GBP/USD at the offer price, you may close out that position by going short
in one GBP/USD lot at the actual bid price. However, this is not possible
with brokers that permit hedging through opening long and short positions
on the same currency pair. Hedging has been halted in the United States in
the FOREX by recent rule changes enacted with the farm bill in October
2008. You still can use hedging strategies via different accounts and differ-
ent futures commission merchants (FCMs), although not quite with the
same affect. You also can open an offshore account, which some FCMs in
the United States will allow you to do so that you can still hedge your
FOREX trades.
stay the same. This happens because it is how much of the base currency you
can buy or sell for the USD that fluctuates.
To determine the amount of loss or gain on a particular trade, you first
should set up the value of a pip and then multiply it by the number of pips
the currency has changed for or against your position since the trade began.
If the base currency is increasing in relation to the quote currency, each pip
above the price at which you purchased it will be counted as profit. And
vice versa, every pip that is lower than the price at which you purchased it
would increase your loss.
It’s extremely important to remember that if the countercurrency is USD
(e.g., the pair is EUR/USD), the value always remains 1 pip ⫽ $0.0001 USD
(1/100 of a cent) for every dollar traded. This is a value of US $10 per pip
for every usual lot amount of US $100,000 traded and is US $1 for mini lots
of US $10,000. Most other currency pairs will have a pip value that changes
constantly between US $0.00006 and US $0.00009 per pip depending on
the current rate of exchange. This is US $6 to US $9 per pip for every US
$100,000 lot traded or US $0.60 to US $0.90 per pip for every US $10,000
lot traded.
Here are some more examples of the calculations to be made depend-
ing on which are the base and quote currencies:
USD/JPY
Currency value ⫽ 92.29
Pip value ⫽ 0.01/92.29 ⫽ 0.000108354
With one standard lot, the pip value would be
0.000108354 ⫻ 100,000 ⫽ $10.83
26 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Crosses (Currency Pairs Where USD Is Not Present as Either the Base
or the Quote Currency)
EUR/GBP
Currency value ⫽ 0.8913
Pip value in euros ⫽ 0.0001/1.2658 ⫽ 0.000112196
Additional formula rate to USD:
Pip value ⫽ 0.000079 ⫻ 1.4194 (GBP/USD rate) ⫽ 0.000159251
On one standard lot, the pip value would be
0.000159251 ⫻ 100,000 ⫽ $15.93
The same calculations will apply to any of the other cross-currency
pairs: GBP/JPY, EUR/JPY, EUR/CHF, etc.
The pip values in these examples are calculated to show a result in
U.S. dollars because this is the main currency used in most trading
accounts. However, many brokers permit traders to open and retain their
accounts in local and foreign principal currencies, such as euros, pounds
sterling, Japanese yen, Swiss francs, etc. In these cases, the calculations
must be made taking the different rates into account with respect to the
deposit currency.
CHAPTER 3 ANYONE CAN LEARN THE FOREX 27
The following table of equivalences illustrates the pip value for each
type of contract, from standard lot to nanolot, based on the preceding
examples and rates.
THE LOT
The contract amount that a bank or brokerage firm allows a currency to be
traded in is called a lot. Usually, brokerages recommend two different kinds
of accounts: standard and mini. A standard lot size is $100,000, and a mini
account lot size is $10,000. There are also smaller retail institutions than
offer micro account and nano account lots, equivalent to $1000 and $100,
respectively.
ORDER TYPES
BUY/SELL MARKET ORDERS
A market order is an order to buy or sell at the current market price and can
be used to enter or exit a trade. Market orders should be used carefully
because in fast-moving markets there may be a difference between the price
seen at the time a market order is given and the actual price of the transac-
tion. This is due to slippage—the amount the market moves in the few sec-
onds between issuing an order and having it executed. Slippage potentially
could result in the loss or gain of several pips.
Online trading platforms may differ a little in the manner in which they
initiate a trade, but a trade normally is accomplished through a form that
shows the current bid and ask prices. Some platforms ask for a confirma-
tion of the order; others have a direct one-click order capability. Usually
execution of the order is instantaneous or, at the very most, it takes just a
few seconds to appear as executed.
28 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Sometimes market orders also can be placed over the telephone at the
broker’s dealing desk. The etiquette to follow this procedure should be
verified with your broker.
with price and duration variables are placed above and below the current
price. When one of the orders is executed, the other order is canceled.
TIMED ORDERS
GTC (Good Till Canceled) Orders
A GTC order will remain active in the market until the trader decides to
cancel it. It will not be terminated by the dealer. For this reason, it is very
important to remember open pending orders after a strategy is executed
because any of them can become a market order at any moment when the
market price matches the order price.
seen. If you fail to match them up and understand them from their individ-
ual perspectives, they will bring you to a tremendous amount of confusion
because it will seem to you that the market isn’t going up or down. When
you see the market rising and you decide to open a position, that could be
the precise moment the market goes against you, and you end up dazed and
frustrated.
It has been said that it is appropriate to use at least two time frames.
However, to combine them is not the same as mixing them. You should use
one longer time frame and one shorter time frame. This is the safest way to
work because you will find more precise entry and exit points for every
trade you make. In this way, you can better assure yourself of entering a
trade on time and exiting it without leaving too much on the table.
You might object that this method of combining two or more time
frames. Many people believe that this can distract the trader’s focus on what
is being done because at a certain point during the trade the shorter period
will go in an opposite direction from the longer time frame. However, when
applying this approach in real time, you may observe that the shorter period
doesn’t impede the longer one when the trade is in progress; instead, the
smaller time frame allows you to better pinpoint a suitable exit. You should
use a combination with which you feel comfortable, but there are particu-
lar combinations that I find more harmonic:
Two time frames (the longer one for watching the trend and following
the position, the smaller one for entries and exits):
● 5 minutes and 1 hour
● 15 minutes and 4 hours
● 1 hour and daily
● 4 hours and weekly
Three time frames (trading the intermediate time frame and using the
longer one for the trend and the smaller for entries and exits)
● 1 minute, 5 minutes, and 30 minutes (for extreme scalping; not
recommended for starters)
● 15 minutes, 1 hour, and 4 hours (intraday operation)
● 1 hour, 4 hours, and daily (intraweek or swing trading)
● 4 hours, daily, and weekly (longer term or position trading)
Something that increases the confusion when you are analyzing and
observing market movements is the overcrowding of charts with trendlines
CHAPTER 3 ANYONE CAN LEARN THE FOREX 31
and indicators that later overlap each other if you change the time frame. It
would be more efficient to use a single chart for each time frame and then
choose one that will be used only to perform the actual analysis.
Another confusion arises when you try to trade in a shorter time frame
(5 or 15 minutes) but you pretend with this to make a 100- or even 200-pip-
long run (and in a few hours, too). This is not impossible, but this is what
usually happens: The risk management is proportional. Let’s say that, on
average, the relationship is 2:1 (reward to risk) or, ideally, 3:1. More often
than not, it is 1:1 (or less) if the entries haven’t been studied with precision.
There is an average time/trade relationship that is about four or five
times greater than the time frame incrementally. For example, a position
opened on a five-minute chart, if it has potential, shouldn’t last much more
than half an hour or up to an hour if there is not much volatility. For a posi-
tion opened on the 15-minute chart, one or two hours is a maximum. If,
after the time has elapsed, there are no results, it would be better to close the
position and wait for the next breakout. On the other hand, a position
opened on a four-hour chart can last for the entire day or even two days, and
a position opened on a daily chart can last up to a week.
Another very important issue to take into account when switching time
frames is the size of the stops. You can use a fairly dependable tool, the
average true range (ATR), to measure the actual volatility and potential
scope in that time frame. Features of the ATR will be discussed in detail
under “Technical versus Fundamental” below.
You can’t afford to open a medium-term position with targets that call
for the trade to “breathe,” that is, perform its logical wave fluctuation inside
the particular range of each pair, with a 7- or 10-pip stop loss that will close
the position much earlier than desired; maybe after half an hour or a few
hours later, unless you get extremely lucky and are able to pick the top or
bottom of the price.
The ATR offers the exact measure for an adequate stop loss (you
should add the spread and, if your risk level allows it, some additional pips
to achieve increased safety). Based on this, you could expect double or
triple the ATR value as a target profit if the position is successful and more
so if it happens to be the bottom or top of a longer run and is followed up
with trailing stops, especially if you are trading in the same direction as the
higher-time-frame trend.
For a 15-pip stop loss, a target profit of 45 pips is fine (risk-reward
ratio 1:3). It’s not wise to place a stop loss much higher than the target you
expect unless your strategy will give you a 90 percent record of winning
trades, which is possible but probably won’t last for very long because the
32 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
markets change and change quite a bit. The best option is not to go lower
than 1:2 or at a minimum 1:1.5 (stop loss: 15 pips; target profit: 22 pips, or
30/45, etc.). A 1:1 ratio also works if the performance of the strategy is
above 50 percent.
Support/Resistance-Based Stops
These are stops that are usually set at the most recent swing high or low or
at a specific price that the market has bounced off of repeatedly. It is rec-
ommended to set the stops a couple of pips higher or lower than the area to
allow for more safety.
The parabolic stop and reverse (SAR) is another technical indicator
that can help you set and trail a relatively safe stop loss, especially when the
currency pair is trending. Be advised that this is not recommended in
choppy or sideways markets.
Trailing Stops
There are two kinds of trailing stops. One is set automatically at a given dis-
tance from the price and is initiated at a set level, increasing thereafter
every time the price advances in the direction set. The other way of using a
trailing stop loss is manually, changing its price level as the trade develops.
Automatic trailing stops can be set on the server side of the platform, which
is the better option in case of a connection failure, or on the client side.
A stop loss order is always used to exit a trade while at the same time
limiting the eventual amount of loss. Some traders use them all the time as
a regular exit strategy, whereas others will have “emergency stops” only, to
be used in the event that something unpredictable occurs. A normal or reg-
ular stop usually is close to the price, depending on the time frame, and rep-
resents the maximum amount of loss the trader will allow himself or herself
to lose on a single trade just in case it goes the wrong way.
Backup and emergency stops are set up much farther out because the
trader doesn’t expect them to be filled. They are set only to mitigate that
unplanned power outage or connection issue that could harm the account
financially and are seen as a last resort.
CHAPTER 3 ANYONE CAN LEARN THE FOREX 33
TARGETS
Targets (or take-profit levels) are represented by the number of points or
pips a trader believes a currency pair will rise or fall depending on his or
her strategy and time frame. Calculations can be made using several tools,
supports and resistance, or the ATR and depend heavily on the time frame
being traded. A higher time frame will allow the setting of wider targets,
but this also will require a wider stop loss.
SWAP
The swap, also called the overnight or rollover interest, is the fee that is
charged by the banks at the end of a 24-hour trading day on open positions
and is calculated according to the respective interest rates of the currencies
involved. In the FOREX, banks have determined that all trades must be set-
tled within two business days. Traders who desire to keep their positions
34 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
open must “close” the positions before 5 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on the
settlement day and reopen them at the start of the next trading day. This
rolls over the settlement by another two trading days. This strategy is
created through a swap agreement, and depending on the position’s direc-
tion and the interest rates of the currencies; it will generate a positive or
negative amount.
The trader is in fact borrowing money to sell one currency and pur-
chasing the other, so the trader pays interest on the borrowed currency and
earns on the purchased currency, the rollover interest being the net result of
the different rate calculations.
Although the interest rate for each currency is identical, swap rates
may vary from broker to broker. Some have fixed rates on long and short
positions until a rate change issued by the central banks, whereas others
may vary the rates every day depending on the liquidity and volume of
transactions.
To be able to calculate a swap for a given currency pair, you need the
short-term interest rates of both currencies, the actual price or exchange rate
of the currency pair, and the amount of lots purchased. For example, let’s
assume that a trader has an open position of 10,000 units long of EUR/USD.
This is the number of euro units that he or she owns. The actual exchange rate
is 1.2825 bid/1.2827 ask, the short-term interest rate paid on the euro pur-
chase (base currency) is 2.35 percent, and the interest rate on the U.S. dollar
short (the quoted currency) is 0.15 percent. In this case, the rollover interest
earned would be [10,000 ⫻ (2.35% ⫺ 0.15%)]/(365 ⫻ 1.2825) ⫽ $0.47.
On an inverse position (i.e., short EUR/USD), the interest paid with a
short-term interest rate on short EUR of 1.85 percent and a short-term
interest rate on long USD of 1.25 percent would be [10,000 ⫻ (1.25% ⫺
1.85%)]/(365 ⫻ 1.2827) ⫽ ⫺$0.13.
The interest is earned on the currency that is owned (long side) and
paid on the currency that is being borrowed (short side).
I will be discussing each one in detail in Parts 4 and 5 of this book, but
I want to give you a summary here that will help you to integrate both views
into your basic trading skills.
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
Fundamental analysis helps you to understand the macroeconomic indi-
cators and political decisions of every government. It provides you with
an indication of the economic situation in a given country that results
from political decisions that quite possibly have an effect on currency
value. When a trader studies the global economic environment and the
political situation of the day, he or she will be able to develop a percep-
tion of the world situation and its influence on the various markets
involved. Unlike technical analysis, fundamental analysis focuses on the
cause and not the effect.
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
Technical analysis is used to interpret price charts. You can see what is hap-
pening in real time and react instantly. You also can study past prices and
volumes and, based on that information, make projections of the probable
levels to be attained.
With several technical analysis tools, you can identify trends and pat-
terns that reflect the buy and sell operations being made by all market
participants at any given moment. Those trends and patterns can be seen
on short, medium, and longer time frames, allowing the study of recur-
ring patterns or particular conditions that are related to specific economic
situations.
You must be able to understand and apply both types of analysis because
the best-studied technical strategy based on past action can go horribly
wrong if fundamental events are not part of the equation.
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C H A
4 P T E R
PREPARING YOURSELF
ADEQUATELY BEFORE
JUMPING INTO
THE MARKET
37
38 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
In mini- or micro accounts, you can trade mini lots, which represent as
little as 1/10 of a standard lot ($10,000) or 0.1 lot, with a small margin
requirement, yielding $1 per pip. Some brokers even allow trading of
microlots, which are 1/100 of a standard lot or 0.01 lot, at a value of 10
cents per pip or nanolots ($100), which represent a value of approximately
1 cent per pip.
Among standard accounts, some brokers allow only regular full standard
lots ($100,000), whereas others add the option of trading fractional or mini
lots. The initial capital requirement for standard or professional accounts is
much higher, ranging from $2000 to $50,000 and more, with different levels
in between, as well as added benefits or limitations, particularly with respect
to leverage, which is usually not higher than 100:1.
CHOOSING A BROKER
Finding the most appropriate broker is a task that shouldn’t be overlooked
because it can make all the difference between your success or failure in the
FOREX market. Speed of execution is paramount, but also honesty and
transparency have to be considered. Demo accounts are good for practicing
and acquiring trading skills, but they won’t allow you to gauge their per-
formance and attitude in real life. The actual features come onto the scene
only after you open a real-money account.
I always say paper trade, paper trade, paper trade. You simply have to be
getting consistent results with your paper trading (demo trading) before
you can start using real money. Most investors, especially first-time traders
(“newbies”), tend to trade well on a demo and then lose it when they shift
over to a real or live account. Why is this? Simple. I have heard it all too
many times: “James, I made 20 plus trades without a looser. When I shifted
to a real account, I felt like every trade I made went against me.” Then I fol-
low by saying, “Aren’t you doing the same thing” I usually hear: “Well, I
couldn’t do the exact same thing. It is real money.” Therein lies the differ-
ence in results. Paper trading is part of the learning process. Once you have
mastered it, then you can move on to a real account.
Some traders will pick this up faster than others; it could take you a few
weeks, months, or even years. That’s right, it could take you some time
before you are ready to trade real money. If you want to see the true success
of the FOREX market, you have to put some time in.
With the advent of the micro account, I have found that opening an
account with $25 to $150 is actually better than demo trading because you
CHAPTER 4 PREPARING YOURSELF ADEQUATELY BEFORE JUMPING INTO THE MARKET 39
are now learning with real money, and you are developing good trading
habits. Regardless of what you do, make sure that you practice your trading
plan prior to trading any large accounts with real money.
Not every broker is suited for every trading strategy. Thus it is quite dif-
ficult to choose the best FOREX broker for you. Some strategies, such as
scalping, will require extremely low spreads and swiftness of execution; for
other, longer-term strategies that involve overnight interest, swap will be a
major concern. Evaluation of the trading-platform software before making
a decision is important because there are significant differences among
them, and some might perform better than others, as well as offering dif-
ferent features, such as hedging capabilities on some of them and one-can-
cels-the-other (OCO) orders and if-then options on others. However, this is
only the means to access the broker’s services, which in reality is the most
important part and what has to be assessed in detail before you trust any
broker with your hard-earned money.
With the most recent FOREX oversight initiatives enacted within the
farm bill, changes are coming. As of this writing, not all the anticipated
changes have been implemented across the board. I would suggest that you
stay informed. The best way that I can help to keep you informed is to pro-
vide real-time updates and valuable FOREX information at your fingertips
through my Web site, www.JamesDicks.com.
It is easy to check a broker’s reputation over the Internet and, more
particularly, to see if the broker is regulated or not at least in its country
of origin. A good broker should comply with a few minimum basic
requirements.
You should check carefully the kinds of regulatory bodies with which the
broker claims to be registered and verify if indeed it is a real financial reg-
ulatory institution or simply a business generic registration.
Currently, several U.S. FCMs allow you to choose if you would like to
open an account in the United States or overseas, most specifically in the
United Kingdom, which has good oversight as well.
The reason for doing this is that with the most recent changes, some
traders are electing to go overseas so that they can continue to trade the way
they want. One example of this is that in the United States, you can no
longer hedge your trades in the same account. Thus traders who like to use
hedging—a strategy that requires you to go long one currency and go short
the same currency at the same time—now will have to use multiple
accounts or go offshore.
If your broker is affiliated with any of the important exchanges, this
adds a significant qualification because it implies that the broker is larger
in size and thus has more representation on the markets, and it vouches for
longer-term expectations for its business life. Check, for example, for any
membership at the Chicago Board of Trade, the London Metal Exchange,
the New York Mercantile Exchange, or other commodity exchanges. Size
and years in business are extremely important because they further guaran-
tee that there will be less of a chance that the broker falls into bankruptcy,
unlike a broker that is new and barely starting its activities. Having a large
number of customers and a bigger capitalization testifies to the broker’s
level of responsibility and commitment.
The reputation of a FOREX broker can be easily checked on Internet
by adding the word review, scam, or problems to the broker’s name in your
favorite search engine. Read the opinions of other traders on forums and
trading communities; do thorough research before entrusting your money
to any broker. You must have a great deal of confidence in your broker, and
this confidence has to be backed up by real facts, not just the advertising
hype (smoke and mirrors). Use a practice account for a while, prepare some
basic questions, and ask the broker’s customer-support team to gauge the
broker’s credibility and responsiveness.
I highly recommend that you deal only with certified brokerage firms.
Check the possible connection to banks or financial institutions. Although
there are not many brokers who will disclose the names of all their liquid-
ity providers, investigate these relationships further. FOREX transactions
are mostly based on credit, and therefore, this is a very important element
in your research.
CHAPTER 4 PREPARING YOURSELF ADEQUATELY BEFORE JUMPING INTO THE MARKET 41
HONESTY
How does your broker control prices? Are there blatant differences with
other price feeds in the industry? A dishonest broker can take advantage by
delaying entries and manipulating the price feed, showing a different price
or constantly requoting, slipping, and spiking prices.
LOCATION
Where is your broker located? If it is an offshore FOREX broker, is there
any kind of regulatory institution where it is duly registered and acknowl-
edged? If not, how can you obtain a guarantee on your funds should the
broker file for bankruptcy? You might obtain some advantages with an off-
shore business with respect to taxes, but check first to see if it is really
worth the risk.
INTRODUCING BROKERS
As you start looking around for brokers, you will find numerous (actually,
lots) of introducing brokers (IBs). Most of an FCM’s business comes
from referrals, IBs spreading the word and introducing the customer to
an FCM. With the farm bill of October 2008, more oversight has been
placed on these IBs. Now, IBs must be registered with the NFA and have
sufficient net capital as set forth by the NFA. This adds a level of protection
to the consumer.
42 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Good customer service is very important, especially when problems arise.
A broker should treat all its customers with the same level of profession-
alism and courtesy and be swift at providing orientation on complicated
matters and questions that could arise when markets are very volatile or
should a technical problem occur with the price feeds or connection to the
platform’s server. Since FOREX trading hours are continuous from Sun-
day to Friday afternoon, the broker’s customer service should be available
during the same time span, 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. IBs often will
piggyback the customer service of their FCMs when it comes to specific
trade questions. If you have any question about your closed or stopped-out
orders, you need to be able to receive a fast response independent of the
time of the day.
Some brokers offer an online chat support service; others have only a
phone-based support desk. Make a list of sensible questions, and take note
of the attitude and knowledge the support staff show when they answer.
They always should be courteous and eager to help and have appropriate
knowledge of common matters that arise in day-to-day transactions and
events. If you don’t feel totally comfortable with their answers or perceive
any doubtful behavior, keep looking elsewhere.
others vary slightly every day depending on price fluctuations and number
of transactions. Check for any excessive difference with regard to the usual
calculation of overnight interest.
The spread is the amount of money a broker makes on every transac-
tion its customers perform. If the difference between the bid and offer
prices is low, the broker’s service is cheaper, and the profit value will be
higher. It is always better to choose a broker with lower spreads.
I always like to say that you get what you pay for. Keep in mind
that just because you get the tightest lowest spreads in the industry doesn’t
that mean you are not paying somewhere else. IBs and FCMs are in busi-
ness to make money—profit is not a dirty word—but everyone has to
make money or it is not a good opportunity. You will just have to use good
due diligence or a referral to find the best place to trade. I go to great
lengths to make sure that the FCMs to which I refer customers from
www.XpressFX.com are the best.
Also keep in mind that some brokers, in order to provide the tightest
spreads, are now charging commissions—a fee to get in and a fee to get
out—similar to the equities markets. IBs are usually paid a fee for the cus-
tomers they introduce to the FCM. This will have no impact on you as a
trader unless otherwise stated. IBs get paid out of the spread, so if you use
an FCM that has a too-wide spread on the EUR/USD, that spread is too
wide whether you use an IB or not; you just get an extra layer of customer
support for the same 2-pip spread. Again, in some cases (which have to be
disclosed), an FCM actually may increase the spread to compensate the IB
for its referral. I do not allow this to be part of my IB; just check the spreads
yourself or ask.
MARGIN-REQUIREMENT RULES
Examine your broker’s margin requirements and margin-call rules care-
fully. At what level will your position be liquidated should the price take a
plunge or rise against your direction’ Some brokers will close all positions
without warning, whereas others will issue some notification that the
account is near the limit they have set.
LEVERAGE LEVEL
The leverage levels can vary a lot from one broker to another, but they are
usually in a range from 50:1 to 500:1. A higher leverage can be somewhat
risky but can give you more opportunities to obtain a bigger profit. A small
initial capital investment will require a higher leverage. (Take note that
44 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
with leverage comes risk, but with risk comes reward and, of course, the
potential for loss.)
TRADING PLATFORM
You can find a wide array of trading software among brokers, from simple
Web-based platforms to more complex applications that have to be down-
loaded. You also will find mobile platforms that give you the opportunity
to trade or monitor your positions while you are on the go. Practically all
brokers offer practice accounts that are an exact replica of the live trading
platform so that you can familiarize yourself with the interface and test
its features.
The platform should be professional-looking and easy to understand and
operate. Not all of them have the same tools available, but a good FOREX
broker should have at least charts that update in real time, technical analysis
tools, and alerting capability. Some of them also include news feeds.
When I first started trading, I used one of the most complicated trading
platforms known to humankind, or so I thought. I set out to develop an
easy-to-use trading platform based on simple-to-use technical indicators
with color-coded graphics. Today, the platform has many variations and
includes advanced charting capabilities. I refer to it more as a learning
environment than as a software platform because it has education and train-
ing integrated into it. The platform will take a beginning trader and walk
him or her right through the various steps to becoming a professional cur-
rency trader. There are numerous FCMs out there that are currently using
my technology, and there are more every day. You can find out more or
download a free trial at www.JamesDicks.com.
CURRENCY PAIRS
A good broker will offer a good variety of instruments to choose from and
will provide the currency pairs that interest you the most. A good broker
also will have other types of instruments, such as metals, indexes, or com-
modities, as well as certain exotic currency pairs, which will allow you to
widen your options and build a more diversified portfolio.
AUTOMATION CAPABILITIES
Some trading platforms allow users to run automated trading strategies
through an external application programming interface (API) or with its
functions integrated directly from inside the software. If you are interested
in this trading style, you should look for a broker that offers automation
capabilities that are easy to implement.
CHAPTER 4 PREPARING YOURSELF ADEQUATELY BEFORE JUMPING INTO THE MARKET 45
MARKET MAKERS
Market makers have a dealing desk. The broker usually acts as a counter-
part for almost every transaction made by traders. Brokers hedge their
own risk by opening trades in the opposite direction for the same amount.
Very few orders are sent to their liquidity providers because most of the
trades they handle are under the minimum standard lot requirement from
the banks. Bigger positions can be hedged in-house, transferred to
another associated market maker, or transacted directly with the liquidity
provider through pooling of funds and opening a position directly with
the bank. Orders are matched or covered one with another; for example,
if one trader is selling and another is buying the same currency pair,
any difference in quantities is assumed by the broker. This often leads
to conflicts of interest: When the trader wins, the broker can lose, and
vice versa. To protect themselves, some brokers widen the spreads, use
slippage, or even ‘disconnect’ the trading server during heavy volatility
caused by economic news.
Because of program trading and more retail customers in the FOREX
market, most FCMs have found it difficult at best to trade against their cus-
tomers. What they know, and what you are seeing, is that if a customer sees
his or her FCM playing any of these sorts of games (i.e., wide spreads, off
quotes, etc.), he or she simply will leave and go to a new FCM. Thus the
FCMs are off-laying their trades directly to the Interbank, the source of the
trillions of dollars of turnover. This allows the FCM to focus on proving the
best possible trading environment, one with a lot fewer conflicts of interest.
The Interbank market is so big that it is less likely to be concerned with the
average retail trader making money because the amount is so insignificant
in the face of total daily turnover.
46 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
You still will have FCMs managing their books as I mentioned earlier.
If you and I took opposite positions on the EUR/USD, the FCM would have
a balanced book, and one of us would lose and one of us would make
money. The broker makes the spread on both sides. This is an ideal situa-
tion for the broker and certainly an acceptable business practice. However,
what happens if we both go long the EUR? Then the broker has a unbal-
anced book. Three things will happen: Either the broker will hold the trade
and thus trade against the customer, or it will go out into the marketplace to
offset the position either in full or at a percentage to minimize its risk, or it
simply will offload the transaction directly to the Interbank. The goal is to
have as many customers as possible so that the broker has a better chance
of having a balance book and making the spread on both sides. There is
nothing wrong with the FCM making money as long as you understand the
process and don’t get manipulated along the way. Education and knowl-
edge are the keys to success. I am happy that you are reading this book and
have put your trust in me to help fill that FOREX knowledge you need to
achieve success as a FOREX trader.
ECNS
ECN-type brokers do not have a dealing desk. The broker serves as an
intermediary to connect traders with the banks but does not take the trades
itself. Such brokers usually charge a commission on every transaction
because they do not profit from hidden charges on the spreads. They also
do not manipulate spreads and prices, those being the quotes received
directly through the Interbank. The spreads are usually lower than those of
market makers, and this is an advantage for scalping strategies. However,
the spreads are not fixed and can experience huge variations during volatile
conditions. An ECN environment is conducted according to real market
prices, and such prices can be moving very fast based on the availability of
buyers and sellers. There is no price guarantee. However, you have the
advantage of being able to see the real market with total transparency and
actual quotes and volume of transactions being made. ECN operation is
most like the banks at Level II, but the ECN is still functioning as an inter-
mediary. Additionally, you probably will need a higher capitalization for
ECN trading because most ECNs allow only full-lot transactions and offer
a lower leverage than retail brokers.
On the NASDAQ, when a trader places an order to buy or sell stock
they are placed through many different market makers and other market
participants. Level II is a more detailed look into who has what interest in
a particular stock. Level II will show you the best bid and ask prices giving
CHAPTER 4 PREPARING YOURSELF ADEQUATELY BEFORE JUMPING INTO THE MARKET 47
you detailed insight into the price action of the stock. For day traders know-
ing exactly who has an interest in a stock can be extremely useful.
TOOLS
SAFETY REQUIREMENTS FOR ELECTRONIC TRADING
Although it is possible to deal in the FOREX through a dial-up connection,
it is recommended that you have a fast digital subscriber line (DSL) or
cable setup, especially if the platform you will be using requires continuous
reception and update of data feed. If you are a long-term trader who checks
the charts only occasionally and who operates mostly with pending limit or
stop orders, this will not be a high priority, but a scalper, for example, will
need a stable Internet flow and a fairly huge bandwidth, which will allow a
fast connection to and from the broker’s server. The computer itself doesn’t
have to possess the ultimate high-tech gadgets, but it should be in optimal
condition and properly maintained periodically.
A second alternative connection should be considered in case the main
one fails. It is good practice to have more than one avenue with which to
access your open positions in the eventuality of an Internet failure or even
a power outage, especially if your broker doesn’t offer phone access.
Mobile access is a good option, although not every company offers that
possibility yet. You could combine your DSL connection with a dial-up,
wireless, cable, or mobile backup. Having a power generator or uninter-
ruptible power supplies (UPS) is a must if you live in an area where there
are frequent electricity outages.
Finally, all the usual safety requirements concerning protection of your
data, such as virus protection, anti–key loggers, firewalls, etc., should be set
up before installing the software and logging on to your real-money account.
TRADING TECHNIQUES
Trading techniques can be divided in two general groups: long term and
short term. Below I will provide a summary of some of the advantages and
disadvantages of those two basic groups before I give a more detailed
description of each of the components they include.
In long-term trading, traders base their analysis on end-of-day data and
look to hold trades for a few weeks or even up to many months. They usu-
ally follow the trend. The advantages of long-term trading are that there is
no need to watch the markets intraday and that traders perform much fewer
transactions, thus lowering any commission costs. In addition, there is no
need for using fancy equipment or software because the time spent analyz-
ing and watching the markets is very short.
However, long-term traders will need to set much larger stops and will
experience large equity swings. Thus they will need to be well capitalized
and prepared for this eventuality. Trades are very few, and exceptional
trades are fewer. Much patience is needed to wait for a trend to develop to
its full potential. Losing months can be frequent.
In short-term trading traders will depend on the analysis of intraday
data and aim to hold their positions for a few days or up to one or two
weeks. Short-term traders usually perform swing trading. A shorter-term
trading approach is referred to as day trading, where trader try to take small
profits from intraday swings, exiting all positions before or at the daily
market close. The advantages of short-term trading are that there are much
more opportunities for trades, thus also less chance of experience losing
months, and that traders do not have to rely on one or two trades a year to
make money. With day trading in particular, since positions are closed
daily, there is absolutely no overnight risk.
On the negative side, the cost of their transactions will be higher in short-
term trading (traders will be paying more spread). Swing traders also incur in
overnight risk. Day traders have to confront more difficulties psychologically
because of the frequency of trading and having to monitor the markets con-
stantly. The need to exit positions at the end of the day will limit their profits.
SCALPING
The main idea behind the scalping strategy in FOREX trading is to take
very small profits very quickly from very small movements of price, such
as 2 to 10 pips. The trades normally are entered and exited within minutes
or even seconds. Small profits add up because the number of daily trades
can be very high, ranging from 20 to 100 trades on average.
52 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
INTRADAY TRADING
Intraday or day trading is a technique that requires all positions to be closed
at the end of each day. The number of trades is much lower than in scalp-
ing, and although very short time frames can be used to pinpoint better
entries, trades are usually analyzed and performed over short- and medium-
term time frames, such as 1-hour or 30-minute charts, with 5 or 15 minutes
for entries. Traders can use a variety of technical analysis tools and wait for
the appropriate signal or opportunity to open a position. If there is no good
opportunity, they can stay on the sidelines and wait for a better chance the
next day.
POSITION TRADING
The position- trading technique is a strategy in which you increase your
position size incrementally as the trade evolves, maintaining the same ini-
tial level of risk. It is also called averaging into a position; the trader adds
a new position of the same size and in the same direction every time the risk
of the previous one can be covered.
For example, you could buy 0.1 lot of EUR/USD at 1.2550 and set the
stop loss at 1.2500. Your risk would be of $50. When the price goes up,
you buy a second mini lot at 1.2600 with a stop loss at 1.2550, setting the
stop of the first position at breakeven (1.2550). You now will have two
mini lots while maintaining your overall risk at $50. If the price keeps on
rising, you can buy a third 0.1 position at 1.2650, setting the stop loss at
CHAPTER 4 PREPARING YOURSELF ADEQUATELY BEFORE JUMPING INTO THE MARKET 53
1.2600, and trail the stop of the first two positions equally to 1.2600.
Should you be stopped out, all three mini lot trade are now at breakeven!
Should the price continue rising, you can buy a fourth mini lot at 1.2700,
setting all the stops for the positions at 1.2650, which will protect your
profits. You then buy a fifth mini lot at 1.2750, setting all the stops as pre-
viously, and your protected profit amounts to $250 ($150 ⫹ $100 ⫹ $50,
with the fourth mini lot at breakeven and $50 risk on the last position). In
this way, you can limit your risk and exposure, which will remain the same
in the whole process, and can accumulate great benefits. This style of trad-
ing allows you to stay in the trend and is ideal to use in longer time frames
such as daily or weekly charts.
Another option that can be used is to convert a profitable day-trading
position into a long-term sequential trade as soon as enough positive points
are covered. You can go on adding to the position in the same way explained
earlier and reap the profits later on with minimal risk.
Position trading should be attempted with small position sizes and no
more than 1 or 2 percent capital risk. The advantage of this trading style is
that you do not need to monitor the market all day, only check from time to
time to adjust the stops and protect the profits already made. This strategy
is much less stressful, and you can earn more profit with very small poten-
tial losses.
SWING TRADING
Price fluctuations in large moves are also called swings. The price goes up
for a while, and then it goes back down. Swing trading is the strategy
employed by traders who ride those swings and obtain profits from them.
Swing trades usually are kept open for a few days, as long as the swing
or trend is continuing. As soon as the price seems to be reaching a top or a
bottom, the trader will enter short or long the market to profit from the
expected move.
Markets usually range most of the time around 70 to 80 percent of
the market activity being done sideways. However, those are “trends
within trends” because each side of a sideways move is a small trend in
itself and can yield many profits because the time frames used are higher
than in scalping. A swing trade usually can give around 100 or more pips
per trade.
This strategy is somewhat risky, though, because picking tops
and bottoms is not so simple to do. Sometimes, what is seen as a reversal
is only a small retracement, and the price continues rising or falling a
short time after, which will cause huge losses if it is not estimated
54 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
knowledge, you can begin to see what all the fuss is about, for then you will
graduate and move up to the next floor.
2
A R T
MONEY MANAGEMENT
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C H A
5 P T E R
THE SECRET TO
MAKING MONEY
61
62 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
TRADING PLANS
What is a trading plan? A trading plan is a complete set of rules that have
to be defined before starting to operate in the market. It should cover every
aspect of your trading in detail.
Building a trading plan, however, is not an absolute guarantee that you
will succeed, but it has all the elements necessary to prevent things from
going wrong or bring a solution when they do, providing you with the tools
to react in the best possible way to any possible outcome.
Markets can’t be controlled, but you can control yourself. With a trad-
ing plan, you are establishing control of the most important part of your
trading—the trader. The number one reason FOREX traders do not succeed
is the fact that they did not build a trading plan.
One of the benefits of a trading plan is that it simplifies your trading
because you will have a defined sequence of rules to follow one after the
other before opening a trade. You will be able to control yourself and estab-
lish a discipline, which, in turn, will help you to leave emotions out of the
picture, making it easier to monitor your trades and detect any mistakes
much faster. You can review your plan at any time should it bring about unex-
pected results, and you can check to see if you are indeed following the plan
based on the rules or if any of the elements of the plan have to be redesigned.
In addition to the general plan, you also should elaborate a more detailed
checklist to ensure that all these elements are being taken into account.
Here is an example of a trading checklist that you can use before enter-
ing a trade: Before entering a long or a short position:
What is the market (e.g., EUR/USD, GBP/JPY, or gold)?
Risk management:
3. Buy entry price:
Buy when the prices are above the high of the signal bar plus 1 tick.
Sell entry price:
Sell when the prices are below the low of the signal bar minus 1 tick.
4. Initial risk price:
Long ⫽ Risk set to the swing low (minus 1 tick) of the signal bar or
of the last three or four bars depending on the time frame.
Short ⫽ Risk set to the swing high (plus 1 tick) of the signal bar or of
the last three or four bars depending on the time frame.
Long ⫽ Set stop to breakeven (entry price) after a range of four bars
above the entry price.
Short ⫽ Set stop to breakeven (entry price) after a range of four bars
below the entry price.
5. Never let a positive trade become negative!
6. Exit strategy: Take profit.
Alternatives:
a. Using one lot (or mini- or microlot) ⫽ Take profit at about
60 percent of the average price range.
b. Using two lots ⫽ Take full profit in one of the lots. Trail the stops
using last short-term supports as a guide.
c. Using three lots ⫽ Take full profit in one of the lots. Trail the
stops using last short-term supports as a guide. Keep the
remaining positions open until a reversal signal shows up or
the end of the trading session.
How many of you really plan your trades by writing all your rules on
paper with so much precision? You have to define what (entries and exits)
you are going to do, when (the signals of your strategy or system) to do it,
and how (risk management rules and other details). If you don’t plan care-
fully and follow your own fixed rules strictly, the trades you’ll initiate will
be wrong even if their outcomes are positive, and paradoxically, if you fol-
low your rules, they will be correct even if they bring about a loss because
you will have been sticking to your plan.
Another important part of a trading plan is to keep a detailed record of
all your trades (winners and losers): entry price, exit price, date, time, stops
and targets, indicators that you used, signals taken, etc. Why did you take
the trade? What was your emotional state at that moment? What were the
CHAPTER 5 THE SECRET TO MAKING MONEY 65
Evaluate the economic situation that’s going on. Check the financial
news, and be alert about economic news releases. How are the markets
doing? Check also stocks and indexes that offer a good perspective on mar-
ket mood. Wait for news release figures before placing a trade because they
usually affect the market, causing random and contradictory moves. You
should wait at least a half hour after every market open and not trade a half
hour before any market close, as well as at least an hour later than a signif-
icant economic release.
Prevent technical issues. Check that your Internet connection and com-
puter are working properly. Perform routine maintenance daily, clearing
memory and temporary folders. Be sure to have in place the utmost secu-
rity software (i.e., antivirus, antispyware and anti–key loggers) to protect
your account data. Prepare your trading charts and indicators so that all the
signals and support/resistance levels are seen clearly, and check that the
sound volume is appropriate if you use sound alerts.
Make sure that you will not be interrupted or distracted during your
trading activity either by other people (turn off the phone, TV, or radio if
needed, and close the door of your trading space) or by other activities you
could attempt to do simultaneously (no Web surfing, chatting, or even read-
ing FOREX forums while you are trading).
Have a clear set of rules for entries and exits. Except in the case of
scalping, where entering a trade also has to be very precise, exit rules are
more important than entry rules.
Set the appropriate fixed stops, or get out at the level you have planned
if you happen to be using mental stops. Don’t make the mistake of letting
losses run in the hope that the market will come back. If a trade is wrong,
take the loss, and move on. You will still be making profits if you limit
losses without looking back and manage your risk conservatively, even if
your winning trades are less than your losing ones.
Mental stops have to be written down even if you don’t place them
physically on the platform. You can set a line on the chart at that level to
help you react at the proper moment.
The same goes for target profits. You should know where to lock the
benefits and set a written target price, either on the platform or as a first
goal when using several contracts or trailing the stops thereafter. When you
get there, take a partial profit on your position, move the stops to break
even in the rest, and trail the stops using your preferred method (automated
or manual).
Know your signals and system well. Your strategy should be simple
so that you can make a fast decision and not struggle with a series of
CHAPTER 5 THE SECRET TO MAKING MONEY 67
GROUP MENTALITY
Don’t let others influence you. In the FOREX, you are on your own and
can’t depend on the decisions of others or other people’s points of view. You
need to develop your own system, which will be based on successive expe-
riences, trial and error, until you are satisfied with the potential results. You
are the one watching the charts and feeling the market.
Don’t confuse this with being part of a network of like-minded
investors. The James Dicks FOREX Network (www.JDFN.com) is just
that—individual investors sharing ideas, strategies, and stories on the mar-
ket, individual currency pairs, etc. In the end, the trade decision is yours,
but what I have found is that discussing trades that may be setting up can
provide an added benefit when it ultimately comes time to place the trade.
Make sure that you don’t talk yourself out of a trade. Nine of 10 times
if you follow your plan and go with your gut, you will be right, even if
the trade goes against you. Moreover, you don’t have to be right all the
time. In fact, with good money management, you can be right just 34 per-
cent of the time and still make money in the FOREX. This is better than a
coin flip. Focus on your own opinion. Of course, you can compare different
approaches to the same situation, but in the end, you are the one who will
make the decision and the only one responsible for your trading.
RESPONSIBILITY
Be your own leader; make your own the rules! FOREX markets are a force
made of orderly chaos, a powerful mix of human emotions, economic cir-
cumstances, and strong financial interests. The market is always right
because it moves as it wants and when it wants and has no fixed rules by
itself. The only stable data on which to depend are your system and you, the
trader, and your ability to make the rules and to change them as many times
as necessary to adapt to ever-changing market conditions.
strive for because doubling my portfolio every 3.6 years is certainly some-
thing I can live with.
With that said, people make huge returns in the FOREX. I see it every
day. In fact, I live it as well. But be realistic. A 20 percent return means that
it takes 3.6 years to double your investment. Thus a 40 percent return means
that in 1.8 years you will double your money. What happens if you make
40 percent in one year? I would suggest that you may want to be even more
conservative with your trading for the rest of the year. If you end the year at
40 percent, you should be very happy. In fact, if you end the year up 20 per-
cent, you also should be happy. Keep that in mind when you are placing
trades and developing that realistic goal you are shooting for in terms of
return on investment, don’t get carried away trying to make 1 percent a day
or more because with risk comes reward, but so does the potential for loss.
Just think smart, and stick to your plan.
Stay with the trend. Identify as soon as possible the main trend and its
subsequent intermediary cycles to minimize the risk for losses.
As is often said, the trend is your friend. If you are going with the
trend, any minor retracement will not affect the final result when
it comes back in your direction. If you are counter-trending, be
careful because the price can move against you and possibly never
recover as it picks up with the long-term trend. In a bullish
market, go long. In a bearish market, go short. In a sideways
market, it is better to stay on the sidelines and wait for a better
opportunity.
Buy strong, sell weak. Identify which currencies are showing more
strength and which ones are weak, and try to pair them up.
Buy low, sell high. Always try to get the best possible price both when
buying and selling. Never sell into a support level nor buy at a
resistance point.
Let your profits run, and cut your losses short. Control your fear of
losing when you are in a winning trade, and learn to develop
patience so that a trade can evolve to its full potential. Conversely,
as soon as a trade has proven to be wrong, don’t hesitate for a
second in closing it according to the rules you have defined for
your risk level. Don’t fall into the temptation of widening your
stops because last time you were stopped out the trade went back
in your direction.
Past performance is not a guarantee of future performance. Your
system might have been performing very well, and suddenly there
is a change in the market behavior. Be aware of the signs of such
a change, and adjust your system accordingly. Markets could have
been trending for a long time, and they now are consolidating
sideways. Be sure to have several strategies ready to use in each
different market condition.
Have an alternate power supply and supplementary Internet
connection, as well as the phone number of your broker’s dealing
desk, ready at hand in case you experience an unexpected power
outage, server disconnect, or general Internet failure. There are
now several options through mobile communications that allow
traders to open or close positions that could be at risk in such
an event.
72 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
If you experience a heavy loss, take some time off to reevaluate the
situation and clear your mind. Stop trading for a few days.
Absolutely do not trade for revenge! You shouldn’t allow yourself
to fall into the need of getting your money back as soon as
possible. Instead, examine the reasons that caused the loss,
recheck all your rules and trading plan, and take some rest to be
able to come back refreshed and with a clear focus.
Match your position properly to your account size. Risking more
than the recommended percentage can increase your gains
tremendously, and you could be tempted to do so because the
high leverages and small margin requirements of some brokers
allow you to exceed your capabilities. Remember that it works the
other way around as well: Losses can become unmanageable very
soon. Think and plan for a long-term career.
Learn to read chart patterns and price action. Draw trendlines, and
study and analyze the market’s past behavior and present trends.
Watch carefully how price reacts on supports and resistances. Try
to understand what happened at every point of the price wave.
Consider scaling out of your position when it is profitable, if its size
allows. In this way, you take some profit at an appropriate
moment and still remain in the market for the long run, should it
happen. If the trade then goes against you, at least you took some
profit at a good point.
When being extremely successful, proceed with extra caution.
Reinforce the discipline or, better, take a day off from the market.
Overconfidence can occur insidiously and you could lose in a few
hours what took you several days to build. Keep your profits, and
stay alert!
exist at that moment. This only means that nobody is agreeing to effect a
transaction at any price between those levels. Spreads and slippage are a nat-
ural part of the trading scene and are the result of agreements or refusal to
transact between market participants and thus are impossible to avoid.
PAPER TRADING
A FOREX demo account is basically a practice account that allows traders
to use virtual credits instead of real money, but with actual real-time price
feeds and conditions, on the FOREX market. It is important for every indi-
vidual who wishes to invest in the currency markets to acquire a solid
grounding in basic financial concepts and to learn as much as possible
about technical and fundamental analysis. Then practice as needed to apply
this knowledge in a live situation to make sure that it is understood.
Paper trading (or demo trading) is often overlooked because most
traders are impatient to jump into the market and gain their first real-money
profits. However, nobody should be trading with real money until they have
at least obtained good results consistently in their demo account with real-
time conditions (not only backtesting).
Of course, being able to get excellent results on paper trading will not
guarantee that you will have the same outcome when you are trading with
real money because the emotional part of trading doesn’t show up (or at
least not at the same level) until you are using real money. However, you
will be able to determine if your strategy or system works and gauge its
probabilities while you learn all the mechanical details of the platform.
This is very important because not every trading software system offers the
exact same features, and styles of trading allowed will differ a little from
one broker to another.
All retail brokers allow their potential customers to test their platforms,
some for a limited time and others with no limited. Precise knowledge of
the software is needed to be able to act as fast as possible and avoid making
mistakes. I have integrated a demo account into my AI software platforms
to help achieve a more realistic trading environment.
You also can experiment with various trading styles and different bro-
kers in different time zones, test various systems simultaneously, and
define more precisely the trading style that suits you best. There also are
different styles of platforms. Some you can access directly online; others
need to be downloaded to your computer. Most of them integrate news
and charting packages in addition to the price feed, as well as a history
78 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
12. Are the trading history and reports clear enough to be used afterwards
for tax purposes? Although this is a responsibility of the trader, you
should be able to get manageable reports under the point of view
of accounting.
acceptable gains on a demo account, chances are that you won’t on a real-
money account either. The good part of a demo account is that you can
make all the mistakes you need to acquire experience and confidence,
which you then will be able to apply under real conditions.
FOREX demo accounts are also very useful for experienced traders,
who employ them to bring their trading strategies to perfection, test new
changes without risking funds, or practice a new system while evaluating
its results in total safety.
C H A
6 P T E R
MONEY MANAGEMENT
A good understanding and handling of money management is the key to a
successful career as a FOREX trader. Although you don’t need to have a
master’s in economics and finance to be able to trade and earn a profitable
income from your trading activities, a certain degree of financial education
assuredly is an asset. This is why I am writing this book and what my orga-
nization really does. We provide education, training, and support. There are
simply not enough places to go to learn such things as trading the FOREX.
Actually, if primary education were even a little geared toward some sort of
basic financial education, maybe we would all be a little better off.
Understanding what lies beneath price movements, how the market is
structured, what the exchanges of foreign currencies are designed to satisfy
in the current economy of the world, why and how currency values change,
and how those changes affect overall political and economical stability is
basic knowledge that has to be acquired. In particular, a thorough under-
standing of the spread and bid and ask prices and how they interact and the
implications of trading on margin is needed to establish and implement a
sound set of rules for money management of your own trading account.
As you have seen before, the bid-ask spread is the difference between
the price at which a currency pair is offered to be sold and the price at
which it is actually purchased. If the ask or offer price is $10 and the bid is
81
82 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
$12, you get a $2 difference, which is the spread. When you are trading on
margin, you are buying and selling currency pairs for a much higher value
than the money you have in your account. The margin can be so small
because the exchange rates don’t usually move beyond 2 percent of their
value. This capability, or leverage, allows traders to obtain great profits in
a small time span, but this also represents a high risk. With proper money
management, you can effectively manage this risk.
If you want to invest in speculative activities, the most important thing
to consider is that you should only use risk capital, that is, money that you
don’t need for your daily expenses or other projects, money that you can
afford to lose should problems arise.
Never invest what you can’t afford to lose. If you don’t have the neces-
sary starting capital all at once, set aside a small portion that you will ded-
icate solely to FOREX trading. In fact, even if you have a fair amount of
money available to assign to your trading, break it into equal portions, and
use only one portion at a time. In this way, if things go wrong, you still have
another portion to start over, and your risks are minimized. Trading is not
gambling. Despite the high leverages available, where you can risk all your
account and reap a handsome profit, this would be based on luck, and luck
is for gamblers. Trading is a business, and as such, it has to be undertaken
with clear goals and asset administration.
As soon as you decide to get into real-money trading, and assuming
that you have already spent a few months paper trading on a demo account,
you should carefully examine what your goals are, how much money you
can expect to earn based on your capital, and above all, whether your goals
are realistic. Make sure that your expectations are realistic and based on the
real experiences of people you can trust.
The first step in real-money trading should be to open a small test
account with little money thus little risk. Try a mini account or, better, a
micro account, where you can open positions and trade for 1 cent a pip.
This seem like a ridiculously small amount, but remember that you are still
learning, and you need to make sure that your profits are stable and consis-
tent before increasing your capital and position sizes.
A final word about capitalization: Many people are attracted to
FOREX trading because it offers them the dream of starting a home-based
business and a chance to be their own bosses and quit a probably boring day
job. How many businesses can you start without initial working capital? If
you are thinking of getting a steady monthly income from your FOREX
activities, you have to prepare the ground very well from the start. Plan all
the steps to get to your goal because this will not happen overnight.
Remember, we’re not in this to be lucky but to be successful!
CHAPTER 6 HOW TO KEEP YOUR PROFITS 83
How much startup capital do I have? How much do I need for my living
expenses? How much time do I need to practice, learn, apply, and obtain
profits from my trading system in a consistent and steady manner? All this
has to be taken into account. Write down your plans and goals, with precise
schedules and numbers. Remember to be realistic in your expectations. A
high percentage of return is possible in some months but will not last over
time. A small and steady increase will last longer. Anything on the order of 2
to 5 percent a month is fairly possible to obtain with discipline and good
money management. This would represent about 0.1 to 0.25 percent daily
profits, which is achievable. Use the power of compounding: 5 percent a
month represents 60 percent a year, noncompounded, and 80 percent if you
compound the profits made monthly. Remember the rule of 72: 20 percent
doubles your investment in 3.6 years, and 40 percent doubles your investment
in 1.8 years. Pick a realistic return-on-investment goal for you, and stick to it.
A SIMPLE CALCULATOR
This is a simple calculator that you can build in any spreadsheet application
that will help you to determine the appropriate stops, targets, and risk-
reward management based on your specific plan and risk appetite. It is
composed of five variable cells, with their respective descriptions, where
you will introduce values based on different situations, and seven fixed for-
mula result cells, with descriptions, that will give you the lot size for the
trade, the value per pip, the amount of maximum loss, and the price at
which to set the stops and targets for both short and long positions depend-
ing on the actual price that you will have entered above.
A B
A1 Account B1 1,000.00
A2 Risk % B2 2%
A3 Actual Price B3 1.4500
A4 SL (pips) B4 50
A5 R/R B5 1:5
A6 Trade Size (lots) B6 0.04
A7 PIP Value B7 $0.10
A8 Max Loss B8 $20.00
A9 SL Buy B9 1.4450
A10 SL Sell B10 1.4550
A11 TP Buy B11 1.4575
A12 TP Sell B12 1.4425
84 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Let’s assume that you are working with columns A and B and cells A1
to B12. Column A is for the descriptions, as follows:
Account ⫽ account equity (not to confuse with account balance
because positions should be calculated with respect to the net
equity remaining in the account).
Risk % ⫽ risk percentage (which should be in a 1 to 3 percent range
as a maximum for ideal money management).
Actual price ⫽ the actual price of the currency pair.
SL ⫽ stop loss (the number of pips or points needed depending on
your strategy and time frame).
R/R ⫽ risk/reward (the ratio between risk and reward you would like
to apply to your trade. For example, 1:5 would be a reward that is
50 percent higher than the risk; that is, in the case of a 50-pip stop
loss, you would need a 75-pip target profit).
The remaining descriptions will have fixed formulas: Cells B6 to B12
won’t be changeable after the calculator is built.
Trade size ⫽ size (in lots, mini lots, or microlots; you can configure
the formula to show as integers or decimals at will). In the figure
shown, size is in microlots, namely, 0.04 lot, and the result is
obtained by multiplying the pip value by 10. The formula is the
next B cell (“Pip value”) divided by 10.
Pip value ⫽ value per pip on that particular currency pair for
the trade size (in the figure it is calculated with a fixed $10 per
standard lot, $0.10 per microlot). The formula is account
equity times risk percent divided by stop loss, or B1 times B2
divided by B4.
Max loss ⫽ maximum amount of loss expressed in U.S. dollars or
your deposit currency of choice. The formula is pip value
times stop loss, or B7 times B4. It also could just be account
equity times risk percent, or B1 times B2, which will give the
same result.
SL buy/sell and TP buy/sell ⫽ prices at which to set the stops and
target profits for both long and short positions. It is divided by
10,000 to get the last two digits of the decimal price in the
case of four-decimal currency pairs or by 100 in the case of JPY
two-decimal currency pairs. Formulas include
CHAPTER 6 HOW TO KEEP YOUR PROFITS 85
In this way, you will only have to change the details of the first five B
cells and will immediately obtain the position size needed to open the next
trade. I also have money-management capabilities built into my AI software,
and you can access this calculator at www.JamesDicks.com.
10% 11.11%
20% 25%
30% 42.85%
40% 66.66%
50% 100%
60% 150%
70% 233%
80% 400%
90% 900%
MANAGING RISK
Every business or investment has some risks involved, including the risk of
loss. It is always possible that a trade will go wrong and turn against your
chosen direction. Being aware of risks can help to minimize them, although
there isn’t any guarantee that they can be eliminated.
data feed from the liquidity provider. Although such problems usually are
solved quickly, your orders could be slipped or closed at a price other than you
anticipate. While placing trades, always set a stop, even if it is a safety stop far
outside the market. In this way, if anything does happen to your trade, you still
have a level of protection.
position to 600 units or 6 nanolots. Your position now would be at 1:2 true
leverage, but you still would lose only 2 percent of your account if stops are
hit. And so on.
Also remember that the calculations have to be made on your account’s
equity, not the balance. You could have several positions open and going
down, and thus your equity would be decreasing. The remaining equity is
the only available capital at that moment.
Position size has to be adjusted while growing (and while decreasing).
In fact, if you maintain the same 2 percent risk and 20-pip calculation,
you’ll be automatically adding lots (or mini-, micro-, or nanolots) to your
position as soon as the proportion allows it. You also can decide to increase
the stops instead and keep the original number of lots should you want to
trade on higher time frames.
There are numerous ways of looking at leverage and risk. I like to keep
things simple, so I think about them separately. Risk is the percentage of your
account that you’re willing to lose on a trade. Let’s say that you have a $10,000
account (for a $500 account, see my comments below). If you trade 0.5 lot of
GBP/USD, every 1-pip movement will affect your account by $5. Thus, if you
set your stop loss 40 pips away from entry, then the risk is 40 ⫻ $5 ⫽ $200,
which is 2 percent of your $10,000 account. Viewed this way, none of this has
anything to do with leverage. Risk is the product of position size (0.5 lot in this
example) and stop-loss point (40 pips from entry).
Leverage determines the amount of money you need in your account
(margin) to be able to take the trade. Let’s say that GBP/USD is currently
priced at $1.45, and your broker is offering you 100:1 leverage. Then the
margin you need is 0.5 lot ⫻ $100,000 per lot/100 leverage ⫻ 1.45 ⫽ $725,
which is 7.25 percent of your $10,000. If the leverage were only 50:1, then
the amount required would be 0.5 ⫻ 100,000/50 ⫻ 1.45 ⫽ $1450, or 14.50
percent; that is, at 50:1, you need twice the margin than at 100:1, and so on.
Thus, at 50:1, you are locking up 14.50 percent of your account balance,
leaving the remaining 85.50 percent free (unused or available margin) to
place on other trades. None of this alters the fact that the risk is still 2 per-
cent, meaning that if your stop loss gets hit, you lose $200.
A standard account allows a minimum position size of 1 lot, a mini
account allows 0.1 lot, and a micro account 0.01 lot. This, assuming a
minimum-size trade on GBP/USD in a standard account, each pip move
alters your account balance by $10; in a mini account, $1; and in a micro
account, 10 cents.
As a general rule, you shouldn’t place more than 1 to 2 percent at risk on
any one trade. This will allow your account to survive many losses. Preserv-
ing capital will keep you in the game. Of course, if you’re new to the FOREX,
CHAPTER 6 HOW TO KEEP YOUR PROFITS 89
● You can’t bear to be away from your trading platform. In fact, this is
one of the reasons I created the James Dicks FOREX alerts—so that
you don’t have to sit at your computer Sunday through Friday. My
traders do that for you, and when they enter a trade, they will send out
an alert so that you can quickly see what they are looking at and make
a decision to enter the trade or not.
● Maybe you have a working trading plan and system, but you often
bend the rules and justify this with a series of weak excuses: “I’m
risking so little that it won’t matter”; “This time only”; “This is the
perfect setup, and I don’t want to miss the profits”; “The market is
moving a lot; I’ve got to jump in”; and so on.
● You think that the more you trade, the more profits you will make.
You open a lot of random positions because behind any of them lies
assuredly the “big home run” that will make up for all your previous
losses. You trade carelessly and furiously, with despair and excitement
and contradictory emotions throughout the entire process. You enjoy
the rush and stress and think that they are a normal part of trading.
Anything else would be boring.
Overtrading reduces your win-loss ratio and increases your costs
because every time you open a trade, you are paying the spread and com-
missions if your broker is an electronic communications network (ECN).
Trading should not be seen as an adventure or a hobby. It is a business
and a money-making opportunity, where you can succeed if you treat it as
such. If you constantly lose or have huge losses followed by extraordinary
wins without a system and a planned strategy, you are trading carelessly
and just gambling. Trying to get revenge after a string of losses is very
common. This attitude is lead by a mixture of fear and anger and only
brings about more losses and frustration. Keep your money management
under strict control. Many traders increase their position size after a series
of bad trades in the hope that a single winning trade will allow them to
recover all. Trade what you see in the market, use your system, and follow
your plan. Losses are part of the picture, and money management will take
care of them. Money-management rules are very easy: Your winning posi-
tions should be bigger than your losing trades.
If you are new to FOREX trading, do not get involved in scalping. This
is a very risky and difficult strategy that requires a strong personality, total
control, focus, and a clear mind that is free of negative or positive emo-
tions. A strict discipline is needed to enter and exit many dozens of trades
in a short time span.
CHAPTER 6 HOW TO KEEP YOUR PROFITS 91
OVERLEVERAGING
The extreme leverage allowed by some FOREX brokers—a relative pro-
portion that can go up to 500:1, which means controlling on the markets an
amount of money 500 times greater than what you are required as margin—
can induce a trader very easily to overleverage his or her positions and risk
a total margin call. The most important and first thing to do is to protect
your working capital.
Working with only a small percentage of your total equity is not easy
when trading on very small accounts. For this reason, you should find a bro-
ker that allows microlots or even nanolots, in which every pip has a value of
1 or 10 cents. A microlot is equivalent to controlling $1000; a nanolot would
be $100. In this way, you can trade with a greater confidence and manage
your risk more efficiently by setting your stop losses at the exact level where
they have to be and avoid being stopped out on tight settings because you
can’t afford to risk more.
Depending on your trading style, you will need to open much smaller
lot sizes, especially if you are scaling or averaging down into a losing posi-
tion, which is not a recommended trading style but can be done with a care-
ful plan. Scaling involves splitting a single position into several parts to
enter at a better price on a trade after a signal given by your system has
proven that the entry and direction can have good probabilities. Always
protect your trading account; the best way to make it grow is to use com-
pounding and make continuous small, consistent profits instead of hoping
that you will hit the jackpot. Remember, FOREX trading is not gambling.
When you use smaller positions, you are limiting your risk and also avoid-
ing huge drawdowns that would limit your available margin and thus your
trading ability.
It is of fundamental importance to determine how much you can
afford to lose because this is what will allow you to choose the most suit-
able type of leverage. Using leverage judiciously allows you to maximize
your profits and minimize your losses and, above all, to keep trading for a
longer time.
92 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
TRADE EXPECTATIONS
Many traders worry about how many pips they are “leaving on the table.”
Currency rates are constantly moving, giving and taking, even in a small
range. Thus there will always be “pips on the table” for traders to take or lose.
The price moves (on average and based on the slowest markets such as
Asia) about 10 pips every 5 minutes, then reverses, then again, etc., even in
a tight channel, as you might have seen (barely 15- to 20-pip ranges). On a
1-minute chart, you can’t expect much more per trade unless the pair starts
trending (which seldom occurs in Asia) or unless you stay in the trade by
managing your stops and watching the higher time frame (5 minutes). This
is especially true if your entry is conservative.
However, in more volatile market conditions, trades can yield a better
return. Thus maybe you would have to find better trading conditions, such
as the Europe–New York market, where a conservative entry will not ham-
per evolution of the trade.
There are thousands of pips of the table (and many more if you con-
sider all the pairs that are moving at the same time). Cherish the ones the
market is willing to give you; there are always plenty of opportunities
throughout the day.
I often make light of how badly traders want to be in the market, myself
included. I like to trade. I enjoy the process. I am not a gambler and really
do not like to lose. I focus on good money management, but even that and
my plan sometimes suffer at the hands of boredom. I can be at home sitting
around late at night after everyone has gone to bed, nothing on television,
and the only thing left to do is pull out my laptop, open up my AI software,
and start looking for a trade. I will analyze everything with nothing really
to trade. In such a situation, the next thing that happens is that you start see-
ing things that aren’t there. You place a trade, and the trade goes against
you. Then you get mad, and you cost-average down or revenge trade. And
then you take a loss. I always say that I can make any chart look good. It is
true. Stare at any currency pair or stock, for that matter, and if you want to
get into the market, you will convince yourself that the trade looks good.
Just remember the rule of 72, and don’t force trades. If things aren’t going
well for you, simply stop trading and take a break. Come back with a clear
head and a positive mental attitude, and then you will be ready to trade
some more.
P
3
A R T
TRADING PSYCHOLOGY
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C H A
7 P T E R
MASTERING
EMOTIONS
TRADING PSYCHOLOGY
Most traders can spend years trying to find and develop the “right” system
with the expectation that it will yield excellent results and make a lot of
money for them. However, very few would dedicate as much time to delve
deeply in their own psychology as human beings and as traders, thus
neglecting the most important part of the FOREX trading scene: the indi-
vidual trader.
Having a good system, coupled with a sound money management and
a disciplined trading plan, is fundamental indeed. But it will not work com-
pletely unless the trader is able to understand all the psychological barriers
than could affect the decision-making processes and the ulterior reactions
that stem from any positive or negative outcome of the decisions made.
Trading must include all these elements in a balanced way for the trader to
succeed in this business.
What is the first thought that comes to your mind when your trade has
a negative outcome? The first thing you probably blame is “your system.”
You “knew” you shouldn’t have taken the trade; you look for what could
be wrong in your strategy, even if the system effectively gave the trading
signal. Seldom, however, do you look inside your own self to see what
really happened at that moment.
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96 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
At the moment you created the plan, you were not trading, so there
were no psychological obstacles to developing the plan after a thorough
analysis of all possible situations. In this way, you can be assured that if you
follow your plan to the letter, you will be making the best decision, and this
will help you to get the best results. The system eliminates most worries
and concerns because you only have to follow the plan point by point with
confidence and steadiness.
There are four steps that I find useful in successfully handling the con-
cept of “making mistakes” when trading:
1. Change your beliefs.
2. Find out what the mistake was.
3. Study the consequences of the mistake.
4. Implement an action so that the mistake doesn’t happen again.
EMOTIONS OF TRADING
Emotions are intense mental states that come from the subjective mind
instead of an effort or consciousness. They usually manifest as strong feel-
ings, such as love, hate, fear, pleasure, happiness, pride, etc. Emotions can
be positive or negative.
Any kind of emotions can interfere with your trading because a trader
is a human being at any time independent of the degree of experience pos-
sessed. Having emotions is a normal human condition; determining how to
deal with them so that they do not disturb or represent an obstacle to your
trading success is what counts.
NEGATIVE EMOTIONS
Negative emotions are one of the main factors that cause trading failures.
The focus of the trader is mostly on fear, failure, greed, self-sabotage, ego,
self-destruction, etc. As a result, enormous amounts of energy are diverted
from the normal learning process. Of themselves, emotions are not a bad
100 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
thing; they are normal reactions that normal human beings experience
when confronted with different situations. However, how to handle those
emotions is the key. Being able to overcome a failure, control oneself, and
move the focus to a new trading opportunity are necessary to let go of the
past and keep on track, with persistence, on the path to success. If you are
unable to let go of the bad trades, disappointment will take over and
obstruct little by little any further attempt at entering winning trades.
POSITIVE EMOTIONS
Positive emotions are the result of a desire for happiness and success, such
as when you have closed a successful trade, accomplished a certain goal, or
finally solved a problem. When you experience positive emotions, they can
enhance your life and uplift you.
However, overconfidence, excessive exhilaration over a series of win-
ning trades, and the rush that comes from the challenge and expectation of
making huge profits also can hinder the outcome of your trades.
in touch with your deeper feelings and thus know yourself more thor-
oughly. Disappointment or frustration appears when losing; happiness and
excitement arrive when you are winning. It would be extremely difficult
not to feel anything and become like a robot.
The first step is to learn to focus your emotions on your positive trad-
ing and life goals, dreams, and projects. When you experience a loss, you
should review the trade and then use the fear of making that mistake again
to help you get out of future trades earlier or plan your exit strategies more
carefully. This would be a positive outcome that will help you to succeed in
the future. A negative outcome would be using hope to stay in a losing trade
in the expectation that the market will reverse. This should be avoided.
Negative emotions have a tremendous impact on your mind and body.
They will affect all your thinking processes and become an obstacle to your
trading. You can’t feel happy, confident, and peaceful when you are having
a negative emotion. You can’t be in control either. The emotion takes hold
of your mind and leads to wrong assessments or decisions.
Accept your losses as part of the business. Learn from them, and try not
to repeat the mistake in the future. Take some time off periodically in your
daily schedule to relax your mind and your body. In this way, you can take
the attention off the negative feelings and turn toward more positive
thoughts. You could try to use some sort of meditation routine as a means to
achieve peace of mind. Among other activities, physical exercise is an excel-
lent way to get rid of all the accumulated stress, and it also keeps you healthy
and thus more fit and energized when you come back to the trading charts.
Listen to good music, music that elevates your mind and spirit and calms
your senses. Let go of the past. Don’t cling to past failures. Move on to the
next challenge because there will be many to come, and they all will be
interesting and yield additional knowledge and certitude. You cannot change
the past, and you don’t know what the future will bring about, but you can
assuredly change the now, which is the place where you should try to live
the most. Changing the now will automatically change any future outcome.
Prepare yourself, and be confident about your skills and experience.
To avoid stress buildup, work with small position sizes until your
successful trades become consistent and steady. When you start winning,
even if small, you should reward yourself in some way for the success.
Learn from your mistakes whenever they occur. Accept losses as part of the
business experience. Some traders even have more losers than winners as a
percentage, but they cut the losses as soon as possible and let the winners
run, so their risk-reward ratio is high even if they win less than 50 percent
of the time. Use positive affirmations, and visualize your goals. Feel like a
winner, act like a winner, be a winner! Do not waste any time or energy on
negative emotions or doubts.
Choose a strategy that fits you and that you understand and like. There
are hundreds of systems, but it is better to master a single one or, at best,
two or three depending on market conditions. This will allow you to be
completely focused on the price action instead of wandering around the
details that you do not fully grasped.
Observe your thought processes. Be aware of what you think, espe-
cially when taking a trade. Thoughts tend to materialize, independent of
whether they are positive or negative. Do not judge yourself; observe and
detect any negativity arising. Replace negative thoughts with a positive
counterpart. Use visualization as a means to make the negativity disappear,
replacing it with a powerful and positive energy that fills your mind and
body with renovated impulses. Feel strong, feel calm, and feel that you are
in control.
Avoid the company of negative people, don’t view negative movies,
and avoid negative surroundings. Read positive books and quotes, think
positive, and speak positive. Thoughts should inspire you to improve and
get better in all areas of your life that you want to improve. Try to be spe-
cific about your goals and the steps you will undertake to reach them. Rein-
force the positive with your ability to focus by remembering great moments
where you had a successful outcome, happy moments, and beautiful places.
Surround yourself with harmony, order, and beauty.
NEGATIVE FORCES
Negative forces are overwhelming behavioral patterns that you direct
against yourself and that invariably will lead you to a loss.
Self-destruction. Individuals who are self-destructive tend to minimize
themselves and thus their future evolution. They don’t have a clear
sense of self-identity and fluctuate between other people’s ideas
and ways of being. Contradiction and confusion are common.
CHAPTER 7 MASTERING EMOTIONS 103
correct the flaws that your system could have. This is the only
way to recover and win in the end.
Lust. The ultimate technological gadgets will not help you to advance
a millimeter in your trading career. Worse, excess in any field can
be counterproductive. Too many screens and too much time
watching the charts lead to stress and anxiety, eye strain, and a
state similar to hypnosis and delusion. You will begin seeing
nonexistent signals, or you will be paralyzed and fascinated by
screen movement when it is the moment to act. Never spend more
than eight hours a day watching your computer monitor; if you
trade and analyze full time, it is even better to make several small
pauses during the day because a focused activity has a relatively
short time span, something around two or three continuous hours,
maybe even less. Stay healthy. If your health declines, you will
not be able to apply your methodology as well, and the odds will
start piling against your success. Your ability to manage your
screen time and overall daily life schedule efficiently will
determine your success or failure.
Gluttony. Respect your stops. Take profits with prudence and
intelligence. You can never catch a complete rally. Not all trades
will be winners. One pip more can become 50 pips less.
Sloth. Nothing happens by chance. Gambling is not trading. You need
to design a plan and trade following its rules. Barely using vague
hunches or intuition or other people’s random calls is the same as
tossing a coin—heads or tails, bulls or bears. The only path to
success is through a methodical and systematic approach.
Fear. Fear is paralyzing. But you can use it to your advantage! Employ
the fear emotions to help you get out of trades much sooner. You
risk not being able to trade another day! Control the fear, and
make it work for your benefit.
own rules. Design your system, test your strategies, and calculate
your money management with respect to your available balance. If
everything is ready and you feel right with what you have designed,
work with confidence and discipline.
6. Have a plan. Never face the market without having a plan. It has to
be based on a working methodology that you will be developing day
by day, which includes what your working conditions are for that
specific trading day. If you don’t have a plan, you put probabilities
against you.
7. Know “How much” and “When.” Always keep track of and readjust
your money-management rules as needed. You should not change the
percentage or amount of capital that you can afford to risk too much
(“How much”) in each trade. You also have to study carefully
“When” to increment that risk to obtain more benefits, using
leverage in your favor.
8. Keep it simple. Thinking that the more complicated a system is, the
better results you will get is a wrong belief. Simple is always better.
At first, it can seem to you that something is missing if you use only
one or two indicators; you will have the impulse to add another, and
yet another, and can end up with a chart in which the price is no
longer visible under so many lines and signs. Besides, following too
many indicators can lead to trading paralysis because many will
contradict each other, and it will be more difficult to get them to a
consensus, so no trade and no profits.
9. You will not get rich quick. Don’t even try FOREX trading if you
are wishing to become rich in one night: Greed can blind you.
The FOREX is a profession, and as such, it needs to be studied as
thoroughly as any other career. You have to invest time and money to
become a real professional.
10. Keep control. Keep your emotions under control. Keep your trading
under control with a proper plan. Emotions are one of the most
important aspects of FOREX trading; at least they represent 60 to
70 percent of a trader’s activity. Those who succeed understand that
they have to handle their fear and greed and eliminate anxiety and
stress before starting the workday, checking the trading space and
keeping it clear of any negatives, and understanding the daily
impulses and emotions that influence them at the moment. Leave
your ego out of the picture, reeducate your natural impulses, and
add a great deal of healthy discipline.
110 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
BECOME A PRO
FOREX trading has to be treated as a job—with a proper (and limited)
schedule that accommodates in your life the best market hours for your
strategy, as well as the rest of your obligations—family, maybe still a stan-
dard job, recreation, friendship, study, and (most important) proper rest
and sleep.
As for a standard job, you should have the proper tools, and these
include not only a good Internet connection but also a good computer and
alternative elements when one of the others falters. You should “build your
office” like you would for any other type of working situation. It should be
free of distractions, have a good and anatomic chair if your strategy asks
for long hours of screen time, and you should plan for frequent short inter-
ruptions to relax your eyes if you have been looking at the screen for
an hour, etc.
Never trade if you feel sleepy (imagine that your job involves operating
a very dangerous machine). Indeed, the FOREX won’t cut your hand, nor
will you slip and fall on the factory floor, but you could risk your account
because the risk of committing a mistake is very much higher when you
aren’t able to focus properly (from lack of sleep, too many hours doing the
same thing, physical pain because of improper furniture, a lower attention
capacity because of a drink or two, etc.).
Choose your trading session by carefully taking all these elements
into account. Set yourself a daily goal in pips and in time spent at the
screen. If you do not meet your goal, tomorrow is another day, and the
markets never stop.
8 P T E R
AFFIRMATIONS
Affirmations can be defined as positive declarations in which the content is
stated as being true. The word positive is the clue because this is the way
affirmations should be phrased, instead of using negative words. For exam-
ple, instead of affirming, “I am free of debt,” you should say, “I have enough
money to satisfy all my obligations.”
Affirmations are used in a repetitive way to gradually reinforce
their power. They are phrased in the present tense even if the goal to be
reached hasn’t yet manifested (e.g., “I am successful” instead of “I will be
successful”).
When I was in the Marine Corps and still today, although not as much
today, I wake up every morning and say, “Another glorious day.” Ooh-Ra!
This is an affirmation. I start every day off like this, and I am able to build
on that positive mind-set throughout the day.
What is less understood is that even if you think that you don’t use
affirmations (consciously, that is), in fact, you use them continuously, day
after day, but you are not aware of it! Your beliefs and thoughts are con-
stantly running through your mind. They are built over your entire life,
and their content is a heterogeneous mix of other people’s beliefs, old
childhood rules, wrong or right decisions you have made based on life
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114 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
experience, and external influences from the media, which can be contra-
dictory at some point.
Those unconscious affirmations are running free, out of your control.
However, it is possible to bring them to your awareness and control the flow
and content so as to be more precise about what you really want to manifest
in your life.
Your present is the result of your past affirmations! You will become
what you always tell yourself, whether it is good or bad!
If you are not satisfied with the results you have gotten so far, which
are the by-product of your thoughts and beliefs, you need first of all to
change the content or expression of your thoughts and beliefs. Transform-
ing your thoughts will transform your results, and this is done through con-
scious affirmations.
Negative thought patterns are repeated unknowingly again and again,
and the cycle has to be broken and brought to the light so that you can exam-
ine the contents of your thoughts and discard all that are negative and replace
them with positive affirmations. Examine for a moment, for example, your
deepest thoughts and beliefs about money. Are there any “imposed” beliefs
(e.g., phrases or statements that you were told in childhood) that could be
blocking your attainment of success?
Affirmations can help you to “clean the slate” so that there are no more
hidden obstacles in your path to successful trading. You have control over
your conscious mind, but the unconscious mind operates under the radar,
feeding you automatically all those thoughts and phrases you have been col-
lecting throughout the years. Your unconscious mind is also connected to
emotions, which make you react based on past programming. The subcon-
scious mind even has power over the conscious mind in cases of conflict. For
example, you decide that you want to be a successful trader and make lots of
money, but there’s a hidden belief that tells you that “being rich is evil.”
Even if you understand on a conscious level that this is not so, the power of
your earlier programming will win, and you will find yourself doing coun-
teractions against your primary goal, which is “making lots of money.”
I always tell people in my presentations that to be successful, you have
to have a plan, and before you can build your plan, you have to set goals,
both long and short term. Before you can take this step, you have to recog-
nize that we all have a different set of values and that at different times in
our lives we have to maintain balance. This balance often will shift as our
needs shift in different ways. You simply cannot have a goal that is outside
your values, such as saying that you want to make a million dollars trading
CHAPTER 8 MIND OVER MATTER FOR HUGE PROFITS 115
and subconsciously thinking that being rich is evil. Build your plan around
your goals and values, and then you will start to see a difference. You must
write this down. If you write your plan down with your long- and short-
term goals, your mind will build a mental picture around it, and you will
work subconsciously to accomplish it.
When you repeat positive statements about the changes that you want
to see in your life, you are reprogramming your subconscious mind. It takes
some time to replace the old statements and develop new ones. However, if
you keep repeating the new beliefs, your effort will bring about the desired
results, and they will become a part of your automatic behavior.
When you open your heart and are grateful for what you already
have, you are telling the universe that you are ready and willing to receive
more! No matter what the circumstances of your actual life, there is
always something to be grateful for. By being grateful, you create a posi-
tive state of mind that will attract all that is positive to your life. Similar
attracts similar, either way, so better to do it in the right way to obtain the
right results!
Thoughts that you have frame how you experience things and people
around you. If you are negative, distrustful, and cynical and you are always
looking for the worst, then your feelings and actions will follow the same
path. You need to change the way you think in order to make self-improve-
ments. Thoughts that are gloomy and negative do not come out of thin air.
You have unknowingly been repeating negative thought patterns, and your
actions follow these patterns. Repeated use of positive affirmations will
break your negative thinking.
“I am worthy. I am positive. I am confident.”
“I am intuitive. I am a winner. I am intelligent.”
“I am patient. I am grateful.”
To trade like the pros, you have to learn to think like the pros. Condition
your subconscious to be in line with your desires. Encrypt those affirma-
tions into your brain to achieve lasting success.
POWER OF NETWORKING
Networking includes connecting with different cultures, ages, special-
interests groups, and networks themselves. Strong connections are con-
stantly being made—following up, keeping in touch, identifying and
making contact with spheres of influence, and forming strategic alliances
where everybody wins, as well as brainstorming groups. Networking is a
way of living, a life skill, more than something that you do with a purpose
in mind. This is one of the big reasons that I created the James Dicks
FOREX Network, so that as a FOREX trader, you can connect with other
individual traders who are trying to accomplish the same or similar success
trading in the FOREX. I encourage you to check it out at www.James-
Dicks.com. There are three basic and universal rules on which its principles
are grounded: abundance, reciprocity, and generosity.
Abundance. Opportunities are open and plenty for everyone. There
are many alternatives from which to chose, many careers, jobs,
customers, ideas, and so on.
Reciprocity. What you give out comes back to you multiplied. If you
give out help, you get back help; give out love, you get back love;
give out information, you get back information. It might not come
instantly or from the same person to whom it was given, but the
balance is always restored.
Generosity. The fundamental philosophy of all successful networkers
is to treat everyone the way they would like to be treated
themselves. This is the determination to give your time and share
your knowledge with other people, with the sole aim of helping
them to get answers to their questions or reach their goals,
without any expectation of receiving something back from them.
STRATEGIC ALLIANCES
A strategic alliance is the union of two or more people who subscribe to an
agreement to undertake or develop certain activities and share common
goals with the purpose of obtaining benefits for every one of the partici-
pants. Such networks can grow with each member’s additional external
118 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
activities, which then can be shared and added to the global diversity of age
groups, cultures, and interests, forming a stronger and much larger network
of networks and bringing to each of them under an enormous sphere of
influence that can be positive or negative.
People who know a lot in one or two areas in which they are usually
specialists are prone to becoming a sphere of influence in the networks in
which they participate. The interaction with other people who are also
spheres of influence in other subjects allows them to acquire a good general
knowledge of many areas.
The important qualities a network should possess are integrity, honesty,
ethics, and sincerity among all its participants because mutual trust is vital
for a network to exert a positive influence on all its members and obtain the
desired results.
BRAINSTORMING GROUPS
Those are formal or informal gatherings where people unite with a com-
mon and definite agenda of sharing mutual knowledge or creative ideas and
solutions or studying a particular subject in detail. Networking is basically
about information sharing. Thus every networker should be very well
informed and eager to update regularly the information he or she possesses
through every learning means available—reading books and the press,
using Internet resources, and paying attention to the information that is
shared through their own networks.
Communication in our times is becoming faster every day, thanks to
technology, and we have much less time to share adequate and useful infor-
mation with our peers. There is too much information to process and
absorb, and there are too many electronic solicitations throughout the day.
Thus, creating or participating in a network is more important than ever.
The following are two of the most important places to engage in
networking in the trading scene:
Forums. Trading forums are a source of invaluable information. There
are various levels and focus in each of them, some specialize in
trading systems, others in general information for newest
participants, and still others in all the different personal
experiences of seasoned traders as well as newcomers. This
sharing enriches each individual’s perception, and it also allows
you to find other people who are working in the same field, going
through similar steps in the evolution of their trading career, and
get some advice from the ones who have already been through the
CHAPTER 8 MIND OVER MATTER FOR HUGE PROFITS 119
4
A R T
FUNDAMENTAL
ANALYSIS
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C H A
9 P T E R
ECONOMICS
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
Fundamental analysis is usually centered on financial and economic data, but
it also can be influenced by political decisions. In this way, a trader can get an
idea of how strong the offer and demand of the currency in question can be.
Fundamental analysis includes examination of the revision of macroeco-
nomic indicators, the stock markets, and political decisions (such decisions
influence confidence in the governments and the climate of stability of the
123
124 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
DOW THEORY
The basic principles of the Dow theory are
1. The averages emphasize everything—the news, data, and inclusively
misfortunes or wars. This leaves us with a clear view of the tendency
of the market.
126 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
FUNDAMENTAL INDICATORS
ECONOMIC INDICATORS FOR THE UNITED STATES
● Balance of payments
● Current account balance
128 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
● Trade balance
● Net foreign security purchases
● Goods and services imports
● Export price index
● GDP and output report
● GDP
● Institute of Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing
● Philadelphia Fed survey
● Empire State manufacturing survey
● Durable goods orders
● Business inventories
● Wholesale inventories
● Factory orders
● Industry productivity and costs
● Capacity utilization
● Industrial production
● Richmond Fed manufacturing survey
● Chicago Purchasing Managers Index (PMI)
● ISM nonmanufacturing
● Energy Information Administration (EIA) crude oil stocks
● Monthly budget statement
● Confidence and sentiments report
● Consumer confidence
● University of Michigan sentiment
● ABC consumer comfort index
● Fed beige book
● Leading indicators
● Empire State manufacturing survey
● Chicago PMI
● ISM nonmanufacturing
● Richmond Fed manufacturing survey
● Philadelphia Fed survey
● Prices, Salary, and Wages and Spending Figures
● Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) deflator
● CPI and core CPI
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 129
Consumption Spending
Consumption is possible thanks to the personal and eventual income. The
decision of consumers to spend or save is psychological in nature. Con-
sumer confidence is also measured as an important indicator of the ten-
dency for consumers who receive eventual income (additional income to
that needed for basic survival) to exchange their saving behavior for a
spending behavior. The higher the consumption spending index, or con-
sumer confidence, is, the better it is for the currency.
Investment Spending
Investment spending or private domestic gross spending is made up of
fixed investments and inventories. The higher the number is, the better it is
for the currency.
Government Spending
Government spending has a strong influence because of its size and its
impact on other economic indicators owing to special expenditures. For
example, the military expenses of the United States had a significant role
in totality of employment in the United States until 1990. The expense
cuts in defense matters that occurred at that time increased short-term
unemployment figures. The higher the number is, the better it is for the
currency.
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 131
Net Trade
The net trade volume is another major component of GNP. International-
ization and the economic and political developments that have occurred
since 1980 have had a strong impact on the ability of the United States
to compete abroad. The trade deficit of past decades has diminished the
evolution of the global GNP. This GNP can be examined from two points
of view: product flow and cost flow. The higher the net trade figure is, the
better it is for the currency.
Industrial Production
The industrial production indicator is given by the total production of fac-
tories, utilities, and mines of a nation. From a fundamental point of view, it
is an important indicator that reflects the strength of the economy and, as an
extrapolation, the strength of a specific currency. For this reason, FOREX
traders use this economic indicator as a potential trading signal. The higher
the number is, the better it is for the currency.
Capacity Utilization
Industrial capacity utilization consists of the total industrial production
divided by total production capacity. The term refers to the maximum level
of production that a factory can output under normal operational conditions.
In general, utilization of capacity is not a major indicator in the
FOREX market. However, there are situations where its economic implica-
tions are useful for fundamental analysis. A “normal” figure for a stable
economy is 81.5 percent. If the number is 85 percent or more, the data sug-
gest that industrial production is overheating and that the economy is reach-
ing its maximum capacity.
High figures of capacity use tend to predate inflation, and the expecta-
tion in the FOREX market is that the central bank will increase interest
rates as means to avoid or fight inflation.
Generally speaking, the higher the capacity utilization figure is, the
better it is for the currency.
Factory Orders
This indicator refers to the total factory orders of durable and nondurable
goods. Nondurable goods are food, clothing, light industrial products, and
products that are designed for the maintenance of the durable goods.
Durable goods orders are analyzed separately. This indicator has little sig-
nificance for FOREX traders, but in general, the higher this figure is, the
better it will be for the currency.
132 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Business Inventories
Business inventories consist of items produced and stored for future sale.
The compilation of this information brings little surprise to the market.
Furthermore, financial handling helps to maintain control on business
inventories in unsurpassed ways. Because of this, the importance of this
indicator for FOREX traders is limited.
Construction Data
Construction data represent a significant group of indicators that are
included in calculation of the U.S. GDP. Additionally, housing traditionally
has been the engine that brought the U.S. economy out of the recessions
that occurred after World War II. These indicators are classified into three
main categories:
1. Housing starts and permits
2. Single-family home sales, new and existing
3. Construction expenses
The construction indicators are cyclic and very sensitive to interest-rate
levels (thus to mortgage rates as well) and to the available-income level.
However, low interest rates by themselves probably can’t generate a high
demand for housing. As was demonstrated by the situation in the early
1990s, despite a historical low level of mortgage rates in the United States,
housing barely increased in a marginal way as a result of the lack of employ-
ment security in a weak economy. In addition, despite the recession in
2000–2001, the cost of homes, for example, in California practically didn’t
go lower.
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 133
Home starts of between 1.5 and 2 million units reflect a strong econ-
omy, whereas a figure of a million units suggests that the economy is going
through a recession. Thus the higher the home figures are, the better result
they will have on the currency.
Inflation Indicators
Traders watch inflationary data very closely because the preferred way to
fight inflation is to raise interest rates. Higher interest rates tend to give
support to the local currency. To measure inflation, traders use the eco-
nomic tools that will be analyzed below. By itself, a higher inflation rate is
bearish for a currency.
are released quarterly, along with the respective GNP and GDP figures.
These deflation indexes generally are considered to be the most significant
measurement of inflation. As long as this number is high, it is better for the
currency.
Employment Indicators
The unemployment rate is a significant economic indicator in many areas.
This measures, naturally, the solidity of a country’s economy. Unemploy-
ment rate is a delayed economic indicator. It is important to remember this,
especially in times of economic recession. While people are focused on
health and recovery of the working sector, employment is the last indicator
to react.
When an economic contraction causes a job shortage, it takes time to
regenerate a psychological confidence about an economic recovery at man-
agement levels before new jobs are added. At an individual level, the bet-
terment of the employment situation can be clouded when new jobs are
added in small companies and thus don’t reflect completely in the data.
Employment reports are significant for the financial markets in general
and for the FOREX in particular. These data are considered very seriously
in the FOREX during transitional periods of recovery and contraction. The
reason behind this importance in extreme economic situations lies in the
panorama it paints about economic health and the degree of maturity of a
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 135
Retail Sales
Retail sales are a significant indicator of consumer spending for FOREX
traders because the figure shows the strength of consumer demand and at
the same time consumer confidence. As an economic indicator, retail sales
are particularly important in the United States. Unlike other countries, such
as Japan, the core of the U.S. economy is the consumer. If consumers have
enough additional income or enough credit because of it, more merchan-
dise will be produced or imported. The figures for retail sales create an eco-
nomic process of impulse to the manufacturing sector. The seasonal aspect
136 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
also is important for this economic indicator. The months that are watched
more closely by FOREX traders as to retail sales are December because of
the Christmas holidays and September, the month of return to school. Also,
November is becoming a more and more important month owing to the
changes in previous post-Christmas sales to pre-December sale days.
Another interesting phenomenon occurred in the United States. Despite
the economic recession of the early 1990s, the volume of retail sales was
unusually high. The profit margin, however, was much smaller. This occurred
because consumers turned their preferences to discount stores.
Traders watch retail sales closely to evaluate the global strength of the
economy and thus the strength of the currency. This indicator is issued
monthly. The higher the number is, the better it is for the currency.
Consumer Sentiment
Consumer sentiment is the result of a household survey designed to mea-
sure directly the individual tendency to spend money to increase or main-
tain at the same level the expenses related to the satisfaction of actual
household needs and thus implies a gauge of the actual labor market. The
higher this number is, the better it is for the currency.
Auto Sales
Despite the importance of the automotive industry in terms of production
and sales, the level of vehicle sales is not an economic indicator that is
widely taken into account by FOREX traders. American vehicle manufac-
turers have experienced a long and constant loss of market share that only
started reversing in early 1990s. However, the internationalization of vehi-
cle manufacturing has grown more and more, given that American vehicles
are being assembled outside the United States and German vehicles are
being built inside the United States.
Owing to this confusion, vehicle sales figures can’t be used easily in
FOREX fundamental analysis.
Leading Indicators
The following economic indicators are leading indicators:
● Weekly average production of manufacturing workers
● Weekly average of state employment claims
● New orders for consumer goods and materials (inflation-adjusted)
● Sales performance (companies that receive slower deliveries from
suppliers)
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 137
Personal Income
Personal income is the income received by individuals, nonprofit institu-
tions, and private investment funds. The elements of this indicator include
commissions and wages, income from rent, profits, dividends, interest
earnings, and payment transfers (Social Security, state unemployment
insurance, and veteran’s benefits). Commissions and wages reflect the
underlying economic conditions.
This indicator is vital for the sales sector. Without an adequate personal
income and a tendency to buy, durable and nondurable goods purchases by
consumers will be limited. For FOREX traders, personal income is not sig-
nificant. However, when it is high, this is positive for the currency.
A zero interest rate implies that there is no other way to use the overnight
interest rate as an instrument of monetary policy.
The monetary policy meetings of the Bank of Japan produce a guide-
line for money-market operations in the periods between meetings, and this
is written as a target for the overnight interest rate, which is to be achieved
with open-market operations. After the March 19, 2001, meeting, the oper-
ating target was changed to a target on overnight bank reserves, which had
experienced a significant increase, thus generating a zero interest rate.
The Bank of Japan executes open-market transactions two or three
times a day. As it intervenes in the money market, it represents an interest-
rate target operating procedure, which helps it to fix the noncollateralized
overnight interest rate in the Interbank market. Additionally, the Bank of
Japan has a steady program of buying Japanese government bonds.
Since 1998, the monetary policy meetings of the Bank of Japan have
been held on a preannounced but somewhat irregular schedule, usually
around the tenth and twenty-fifth of each month. Interest-rate decisions are
announced immediately after the meeting. No press conference or further
information or discussion is given. The minutes of the meetings are
released after six weeks or more. The Bank of Japan issues a monthly
report of recent economic and financial developments that summarizes all
the economic information that has been used in the discussions during the
monetary policy meeting.
Tankan Index
This index is based on the surveys that Japanese companies hold four times
a year. It shows business confidence. The Tankan index is one of the key
indicators of the Japanese economy.
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 139
Money Supply
The money supply strongly affects the rate of the Japanese currency, the
yen. If the supply is growing slowly, the Bank of Japan needs to decrease
the interest rate, which has a negative influence on the yen. In the same
way, deflation (represented by a fall in prices) has a negative effect on the
Japanese currency.
For several years in the recent past, Japan had a 0 percent interest rate.
The rate was increased to 0.5 percent but remained much lower than the
rates of other countries. On the other hand, Japan has a very high level of
savings, around US$15 billion (much higher than the total U.S. GDP).
Because of the low interest rate, Japanese investors save in other curren-
cies, accumulating around US$6 trillion in foreign assets. This, in turn,
increases the value of those foreign currencies. Other investors have bor-
rowed the yen to invest in the global markets. However, in the recent
months, the lowering of interest rates in all major currencies has caused the
yen carry trade to begin unwinding.
INTERVENTIONS
Interventions are the result of decisions by central banks to intervene in
the economy by using their reserves and buying or selling their foreign-
currency assets in order to stabilize the value of their own currency. Inter-
ventions represent quite an interesting opportunity for traders because
CHAPTER 9 ECONOMICS 141
they can be an indicator that the currency involved has a lower value with
respect to fundamentals, especially if what triggers the intervention is
highly negative, such as the national debt or a natural catastrophe.
The sharp fall of one currency leads the counterpart asset to rise fast,
and thus traders can speculate to what extent there could be an intervention,
which would have as a result a series of price movements in the near term.
They can then take a position previous to the potential intervention and
make profits on those moves, exiting after the effects of the intervention
have ended. This can be very risky, however, because such traders are oper-
ating against the current trend, and large capitals losses could result in a
very short period of time because of the fast-moving market.
Some indicators will signal if there is a possibility of intervention.
Interventions usually will occur at the same price level as previous inter-
ventions. This is not always true, though, because sometimes the interven-
tion is canceled by the central bank if it costs too much. Another clue can
be found in speeches by finance officials, such as announcements or
threats of possible future interventions. Those words sometimes can be
enough to give impulse to the markets. However, if there is no reaction,
with time, such announcements will have lesser and lesser impact because
their credibility decrease. Finally, FOREX analysts can determine fair esti-
mations of levels where an intervention may occur, especially those who
work for the main banks or investment companies.
How can you trade when an intervention is occurring? First of all, you
should identify the previous intervention levels and evaluate the actual
expected price level to make your decision. Then, of course, always trade
with a stop loss and a target level so as to limit losses and lock in some prof-
its. Leave enough room on the stops though, to mitigate against sharp
movements that may occur after the intervention. The targets for profits
should be set at the same levels that were attained in the previous interven-
tion. Finally, open your trade with a reduced position size. Remember that
you will be trading against the main long-term trend, so there are high risks
of a margin call if the intervention doesn’t happen during the time span that
you have considered.
Although interventions can be extremely profitable, trading them is
mostly for pure speculators. There are several ways to identify the moment
when an intervention is most likely to happen, but it is always a good idea
to be prepared by using a very low leverage and a well-planned smart
money management through the use of stop losses and the setting of targets
to lock profits.
142 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
There is a saying, “Buy the rumor; sell the fact.” You have to keep up
with what is getting the focus of the market at any moment. The effects of
economic releases can last for hours and even days after they have been
issued.
The most common way to trade the news is to examine the charts pre-
vious to a particular big number to be released and look for periods of con-
solidation in preparation for that release. You then trade the breakout that
ensues after the figures have been made public. Since the effects usually
last for more than one day, you can either trade news intraday or based on
the daily charts in a more conservative way.
Market Hours
the overreaction of the market is correct, you will profit because the mar-
kets always make a correction over time.
A contrarian indicator is one that indicates that a currency or stock
actually will do the opposite of what the indicator says. When a particular
currency pair or stock starts to get a huge amount of press coverage or
advertising, it is time to pay attention for the imminent reversal. In the case
of a currency pair, the more it is advertised that the pair will be rising (or
falling), the more it is the time to go in the opposite direction. When every-
body is long or short, it’s time to get out and go the other way.
P
5
A R T
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
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C
10
H A P T E R
TECHNICAL
INDICATORS
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
In a technical analysis, you look at the price and volume data to be able to
predict future movements. The basis for a technical analysis was given by
Charles H. Dow, whose methods were based on the behavior of investors,
on psychology, and on the movements of prices. When an analysis is made
based on the movement of prices, you will be doing a technical analysis.
As you can see in charts that are not more than a compilation of move-
ments in the market price of a particular currency, the beginning of a tech-
nical analysis is that any market moves in trends and in the statements of
encouragement of traders. Therefore, all the information necessary to con-
duct a technical analysis is in the chart of a particular currency.
The analysis of trends is necessary for trading in the FOREX because
in the FOREX you can gain in a bull market and a bear market as you buy
one currency and sell the other. The trend lines are a simple reference that
will be useful in confirming the direction of the trend in a currency.
The advantage of technical analysis is that all the factors that affect
the prices of currency, both rational or irrational (e.g., economic data,
hopes, and feelings), are expressed in a single element that represents the
agreement between buyers and sellers at a given time. This element is the
quotation, which synthesizes the future expectations and estimates that
investors have about each currency and that determine the price.
149
150 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
pinbar
pinbar
pinbar
inside bar
The inside bar setup needs three candles or bars for confirmation.
The previous bar is bigger, the inside bar is contained within the
length of the previous bar, and the third bar must break both of
the first two bars for validity, as you can see in the figure above.
The direction will be up or down depending on which side
breaks first.
UPTREND
Higher Highs (HH)
LH
Higher Lows (HL)
LL
Outside Bar (OB) HH
LL HH
LH
HH HL
OB
LL
LH
HH
IB
LL
HL
DOWNTREND
OB
Lower Highs (LH)
Lower Lows (LL) HL
Inside Bar (IB)
LL
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 153
Corrective moves, on the other hand, are usually the result of two pos-
sible situations: profit taking after an impulsive move or a mixed number
of buyers and sellers sitting at a certain level, which could become a rever-
sal point. Very often the next move after a correction is a continuation of
the previous impulsive move. This type of move has a much lower and
unstable order flow and offers a much smaller number of opportunities for
good trades.
Gauging the time elapsed between moves is useful in order to have an
idea of how much time you will have to wait for the next continuation
move. Although not exactly accurate, the price wave usually has a particu-
lar frequency (different in every time frame) that can be measured and
help you to identify impulses and corrections and give you a rough idea
about the possibilities of success for a particular entry. Counting the bars
when a pattern is formed is also important in verifying the consistency and
potential of the given pattern. For example, wedges and triangles usually
complete or exit their patterns at between two-thirds and three-quarters of
the move. It is quite rare that they go all the way to completion. Finally,
observing the time variable in a consolidation pattern will give you an idea
of the potential breakout that has to come later. The longer this time is, the
greater is the possibility that the following breakout is a legitimate one.
Also, it will break with more strength after a long period of ranging.
LINE CHARTS
In line charts, the closing price is displayed as a point, which is then con-
nected to all the other points through a line, called the price line. This line
offers very little information but can show the general trend in the price of
a particular currency. Every different time scale will show the closing price
point for that specific time frame. In some trading platforms, you are able
to plot the chart based on a different price (e.g., open, high, or close), but
the standard is usually the close because the fluctuation in price during that
time frame is not as important as the point in time where the pair closes for
most traders.
Other possible settings are an average price between the open (O),
close (C), high (H), and low (L), or (O ⫹ H ⫹ L ⫹ C)/4, or other less com-
mon settings such as the average of high, low, and close, or (H ⫹ L ⫹ C)/3,
or (H ⫹ L ⫹ 2 ⫻ C)/4, or (H ⫹ L)/2, etc. The average of the four prices is
best because it is easier to work with and takes out most of the noise.
The line chart is much harder to interpret, especially for beginners,
and some chart patterns are not as easier to spot. It can be of general use
to have an overview of the price movement, but I would not recommend it
for hands-on trading because other types of charts can give much stronger
signals and indications.
BAR CHARTS
A bar chart can show three or four types of prices, the opening and closing
price and the high and low on OHLC bars or simply the high, low, and close
prices on HLC bars. The top indicates the highest price for the period, the
bottom shows the lowest price, and the vertical bar indicates the trading
range for the given period. The horizontal dash on the left side is the open
price, and the dash on the right side is the close price. On HLC bars, only
the right dash is seen.
The bar chart is one of the most popular charts, and it offers a fair
amount of information about the price movement of the currency pair. High
and low prices are united by the vertical bar showing the trading range, and
visualization of market movements is much better than on line charts
because you can see where the price has closed with respect to the opening
price and thus see if the market is going up or down.
CANDLESTICK CHARTS
Candlestick charts are very similar to bar charts in the type of information
they offer, also containing price direction information. However, the
graphic display is easier to interpret.
Opening and closing prices make the body of the candlestick. When
the opening price is lower than the closing price (up candle), the body is
left blank or white. When the opening price is higher than the closing
price (down candle), the body is filled with color or black (this can be
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 157
HEIKEN-ASHI CHARTS
Heiken-Ashi charts were invented by the Japanese and look like candle-
stick charts, but they use a different method to calculate and plot the
candles.
Close: This is the average of the open, close, high, and low prices
(OHLC/4).
Open: This is the average of the open and close of the preceding
candle.
High: This is the highest value among the high, open, and close
prices.
Low: This is the lowest value among the high, open, and close prices.
In this way, they are related to each other. When calculating the open
and close prices of every candle, you need to know the preceding open and
close prices, and the high and the low are affected in the same way by the
preceding candle. For this reason, the candles appear on the chart with a
certain delay. This can be a good feature when you are trading very volatile
currency pairs and also when you engage in scalping very short time
frames such as the 1-minute chart because it prevents you from entering too
early and making mistakes by trading against the market. However, trading
with Heiken-Ashi candles by themselves is not the best option, especially
in higher time frames, because the action is delayed, and you could be
entering too late. You should have another chart open to see the normal can-
dlesticks or bars along with this indicator.
When the market is bullish, Heikin-Ashi candles have big bodies and
long upper shadows but no lower shadow. When the market is bearish,
Heikin-Ashi candles have big bodies and long lower shadows but no upper
shadow. Reversal candles are similar to doji candlesticks, with a very small
body and long upper and lower shadows.
There are five primary signals that identify trends and buying oppor-
tunities:
● Hollow candles with no lower shadows indicate a strong uptrend; they
signal to keep on the long side and gather more profits.
● Hollow candles signify an uptrend; you might want to add to your
long position and exit short positions.
● One candle with a small body surrounded by upper and lower
shadows indicates a trend change; risk-loving traders might buy or
sell here, whereas others will wait for confirmation before going short
or long.
● Filled candles indicate a downtrend; you might want to add to your
short position and exit long positions.
● Filled candles with no higher shadows identify a strong downtrend;
stay short until there’s a change in trend.
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 159
RENKO CHARTS
Renko charts also were invented by the Japanese. In this type of chart, the
time and volumes are not taken into account. The chart is concerned only
with price movement.
Renko candles look like small boxes or bricks (renga in Japanese)
with no upper or lower shadows. The size of the box can be changed based
on a chosen set price value. The smaller the size, the higher will be the
number of boxes needed, so more details of the price changes will be
shown on the charts.
The chart is built by placing a box in the next column as soon as the
price surpasses the top or bottom price of the preceding box by a given
amount. In the chart above, the range established is 40 pips. White or hol-
low boxes are used when the direction of the trend is up, whereas black or
filled boxes are used when the trend is down.
This type of chart helps traders to identify very efficiently the main
support and resistance levels. The signals to buy or sell appear when the
direction of the trend changes, and the boxes alternate colors.
For example, a trader will sell when a black box is placed at the end
of a series of rising white boxes. Some caution should be exercised,
though. Since this type of chart was designed as a means to follow the
general price trend of a particular asset, you often can get false signals
when the color of the boxes changes too early, thus producing a whipsaw
effect.
160 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
30 X
29 X O X X X
28 X O X O X O X
27 X O X O X O X
26 X O O X O X
25 X X O X O X X
24 X O X O X O X O X
23 X O X O O X O X
22 X X X O X O X O X
21 X O X O X O O O
20 X X O X O X
19 X X O X O X O X
18 X O X O X O X O X
17 X O X O O O X
16 X O X O
15 X O
14 X
13 X
12 X
11 X
10 X
The first thing defined here is the box size, or the number of points that
the currency pair will have to move to justify the drawing of a new box.
Every time the price changes more than that amount, another X or O is
added. For example, in the chart above, the box size is 1, and every time the
price goes up an additional point, another X is drawn. Xs and Os are not
mixed in the same column. If the price goes down after a previous rise, a
new column will be drawn to the right.
achieve this was to take time out of the equation, focusing solely on price.
This is similar to a point and figure charts approach, where only price
changes are recorded.
Pip Range
Constant ranges are used to define the bars or candles. Usually, you can
find ranges of 8, 10, 15, 20, and 30 pips. A new bar is opened as soon as
that range has been covered and the price opens higher or lower, starting a
new range with the same pip value. You can apply to these charts the same
indicators you would on normal bar or candlestick charts.
These charts are particularly interesting when you are facing a stalling
market, where there is a long congestion of prices, which in a normal chart
would be reflected in several short-bodied bars or candles. In this way,
attention can be focused on the essential changes in price itself, taking out
the usual noise of sideways markets. When a range is complete, a new bar
opens independent of the time. You could have a single bar for a whole day
of trading if you are using a 30-pip range and the price hasn’t gone over or
under that range for the duration of the day. As soon as the market goes over
the 30-pip range, a new bar will open, starting at the closing level of the
preceding bar, and the 30-pip range will have to be completed again to
allow a new bar to open later on. Conversely, if the range is covered in a few
minutes and the price keeps going in a fast move, you will have several 30-
pip range bars or candles showing those changes.
162 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
TREND INDICATORS
MOVING AVERAGES
The moving average (MA) is an indicator that shows the average value of
the price of a currency pair over a set period. It is generally used to measure
momentum and define areas of possible support and resistance, as well as
for checking the direction of a trend. The most commonly used detection of
upward or downward momentum is through the cross of two moving aver-
ages, one short term and the other longer term. When the fast MA crosses
above or below the slow MA, it indicates a possible change in trend.
There are several variations in the calculation for this indicator. An MA
can be simple, exponential, smoothed, or linearly weighted.
Simple
Exponential
Smoothed
Moving Averages (50 periods) applied to Close Price Linear Weighted
recent price changes in comparison with an SMA. EMAs are used, for
example, in the moving average convergence-divergence (MACD) indica-
tor and in other oscillators. The most commonly used values to gauge long-
term trends are the 50- and 200-day EMAs.
ADX
Dl+
25
Dl–
164 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
BOLLINGER BANDS
Bollinger bands are an indicator developed by John Bollinger that allow
users to compare the volatility and relative price levels over a time period.
This indicator consists of three bands that follow the price action of a given
currency pair.
The middle line is an SMA of the set periods (the chart above is set to
the standard of 20 periods). The upper band is commonly set to 2 standard
deviations plus the given SMA value, and the lower band is set to the SMA
minus 2 standard deviations. The standard deviation is a statistical unit of
measure that offers an assessment of the volatility of a certain price. In this
way, the bands can react quickly to price movements and reflect periods of
high and low volatility. Bands will widen when there is a greater volatility
and will stretch when the volatility is very low.
The number of periods of the moving average, as well as the number
of deviations, would have to be adjusted to the usual behavior of the spe-
cific currency pair as well as the time frame that is being used. The default
setting is 20 periods and 2 standard deviations. Properly set Bollinger
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 165
upper band
mean line
(SMA 20)
lower band
bands should hold both support and resistance of the price reversal swings,
that is, the higher low in a downward move turning to the upside and the
lower high in an upward move turning to the downside. The price of this
second low or high should not penetrate the bands. Those higher lows or
lower highs are formed as a reaction after a strong fall or rise. The price
has corrected, and it rallies again in the former direction, failing to reach
the previous bottom or top.
Bollinger bands allow traders to identify periods of high volatility and
extremely low volatility. In particular, they help in gauging when prices are
reaching unsustainable extremes and are near a reversal to the mean. Peri-
ods of lower volatility, when the bands are very narrow, lead to a breakout.
However, the bands will not give any indication of the future direction of
prices. This should be determined with the help of other indicators and gen-
eral technical analysis.
A signal that can be taken from the configuration of the bands is the
double bottom or double top. When prices penetrate below the lower band
and remain there, resting above the band, this is a signal for a long position,
which will be confirmed when the price rises above the middle band. When
prices penetrate above the upper band and a second attempt fails to break
through, and the price remains below the band, this is a signal for a short
166 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
position, which will be confirmed when the price falls down and reaches
the middle band.
It is important to note that the second low or the second high has to
remain above the bands, although the remaining lows can be higher or
lower than the others.
This indicator can be used for trend following because the price will
tend to remain near one of the bands, for straddling breakouts when there is
a very tight zone, and also for counter-trending by profiting from trend
exhaustion, as in the preceding example of double bottoms and double tops.
Note that just touching the bands is not a signal in itself; this will only
indicate that prices are reaching an extreme with respect to their mean,
becoming overbought or oversold. However, when trending, prices can
continue the path of one of the bands and fluctuate between the band and
the middle line without crossing to the other side.
+100
–100
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 167
line indicate a buy or sell opportunity, and values above 100 show a possi-
ble overbought condition. Meanwhile, values below 100 will alert of a
possible oversold situation.
The formula for its calculation is as follows:
CCI ⫽ price – MA/0.015 ⫻ D
where MA is a moving average of the price and D the normal deviations
from that average.
Parabolic SAR
168 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
0.00300
0.00250
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 169
Bulls Power
Bears Power
170 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
the low prices for bear power. Both are usually shown as histograms, as you
can see in the figure below.
Interpretation of the moving average is relative to its slope: When the
average rises, there is a bigger bullish sentiment in the market. When it
falls, the sentiment is more bearish. The turning point is when prices can’t
be pushed any higher, which shows as the high value in the indicator;
the low shows the turning point for a reversal up, when sellers can’t drive
the price any lower. Both turning points show the maximum power of
each group.
When bulls power is positive and rising, bulls are stronger; the values
become negative when they are particularly weaker. Bears power is usually
negative and shows a positive value when the market is under complete
control of the bullish sentiment.
MOMENTUM
The momentum indicator measures the rate at which the price or volume
of transactions of a certain currency pair accelerates. As soon as this
acceleration is seen in price, most traders will enter the market because it
is very probable that the momentum will continue in the same direction.
This is used mostly in short-term strategies and not recommended for
beginners.
Calculation of momentum is based on the change in price multiplied by
the trading volume for a given period. The volume is an important element
of this indicator because it determines the strength and potential durability
over time of a certain change in prices. If the volume is low, the move will
have little momentum.
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 171
Momentum
+2
–2
VOLUME
The volume indicator shows the number of contracts that are being traded
for a particular currency pair during a specific period, depending on each
time frame. Each bar indicates the number of transactions realized, and as
Volumes
172 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
long as the current period is active, the value will go up with every addi-
tional trade that is made.
Volume is commonly used to gauge the strength or importance of a
market move. The higher the volume during a particular price move, the
more significant the move will be.
However, what does your broker’s platform volume indicator really
measure? Unless you are trading directly with a major liquidity provider,
it will show the volume of transactions performed at any given point on
a time scale (thus depending on it), not only the open effective orders
(buy or sell) but also the positions that are closed in both directions. But
only for that brokerage!
It is not a reflection of the whole FOREX market, but the propor-
tional part of transactions that occurred on the specific platform on which
you are trading. This explains why in certain situations (e.g., during the
Christmas holidays or on other special dates) there might be a huge dis-
crepancy between prices and volumes among several different platforms
because the “population” of traders on each of them can have its own
behavior that is different from that of others at key moments, while they
behave under a general average in normal situations (e.g., although every
broker has customers from every corner of the world, I am convinced that
many of them concentrate a higher number of traders from one or another
nationality depending on the broker’s origin, and this has a special inci-
dence on certain holidays).
For example, the volume of a 5-minute candle that shows 18 transac-
tions at 13:55 can contain
● One buy and six sell trades (including the eventual counterpart that
brokers usually place on the market)
● Eleven trades closed, of which
● Two because of a sell: target reached or manual close
● Three because of a buy: target reached or manual close
● Six stopped out with stop losses or trailing stops (three sells and
three buys)
UNDERSTANDING OSCILLATORS
OSCILLATOR
An oscillator is a technical analysis tool that fluctuates inside a band of two
extreme values based on the results of a trend indicator that allows discov-
ery of short-term overbought or oversold conditions. When the value
approaches the upper extreme, the currency pair is considered to be in an
overbought condition, and conversely, when it approaches the lower
extreme, the pair is considered to be in an oversold condition. Such points
would be probable points of swing reversal or correction. They are very
useful when the market is ranging in a sideways motion in periods of con-
solidation. The most common oscillators are the moving average conver-
gence-divergence (MACD), the stochastic oscillator, and the relative
strength index (RSI).
MACD histogram changes to positive when crossing the zero line, this is an
early signal of a possible signal cross upward. When the signal also crosses
above the MACD histogram, this is confirmation of the former cross of the
zero line and a signal to buy. When the MACD falls below the signal line,
this is an indication that it might be time to sell the currency pair.
Divergences, which will be discussed at the end of this chapter, are
used when the direction of the price of the currency pair diverges from the
direction of the MACD and signals a possible end of the current trend.
STOCHASTIC OSCILLATOR
The stochastic oscillator is a technical indicator based on momentum that
compares the closing price of a currency pair with its price range over a
given time period. The formula for this indicator is as follows:
%K ⫽ 100[(C ⫺ Lx)/(Hx ⫺ Lx)]
where x ⫽ number of previous trading sessions
C ⫽ the most recent close price
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 175
Stochastic Oscillator
80
20
The theory on which this indicator is based is that prices tend to close
near their high when the market is in an uptrend and that they tend to
close near their low when the market is trending down. The signal is given
when the %K line crosses through the three-period moving average called
the %D.
70
30
Senkou Span A
Senkou Span B
Kumo (Cloud)
Kijun Sen
Tenkan-Sen
Chinkou Span
visual system, and it enables traders to quickly discern and filter the low-
probability trading setups from those with higher probability.
The kumo (or “cloud”) is the very core of this system. It enables you
to immediately distinguish the prevailing trend and the relationship of the
actual price with regard to that trend and provides a deep, multidimen-
sional view of support and resistance as opposed to just a single, unidi-
mensional level that is provided by other charting systems. This more
complete view represents a much better the way to see how the market
truly functions, where support and resistance are not merely single points
on a chart but rather are areas that expand and contract depending on
market dynamics.
DIVERGENCES
Divergences are divided into classic or regular (bullish and bearish) and
reverse or hidden (bullish and bearish).
178 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
CLASSICAL HIDDEN
BULLISH BULLISH
DIVERGENCE DIVERGENCE
HL
LL
HL
LL
Bullish (Buy)
Classic or regular ⫽ price LL ⫹ oscillator HL
Reverse or hidden ⫽ price HL ⫹ oscillator LL
Bearish (Sell)
Classic or regular ⫽ price HH ⫹ oscillator LH
Reverse or hidden ⫽ price LH ⫹ oscillator HH
It can be useful for you to remember this phrase: “Tops down, bottoms
up,” to evaluate divergences. Whenever the tops are involved (lower and
higher highs on the price or on the indicator), the movement that usually
ensues is bearish or downward; whenever the bottoms are involved (lower
and higher lows in any of both), the movement that most probably follows
will be bullish or upward.
Divergences act as an early warning system, alerting you when the
market could reverse. However, they do not have to be used as a trading sig-
nal. Relying only on divergences would give too many false signals. But if
you use them along with a particular setup and strategy and confirm the
entries with other indicators, your trades will have a high probability of
being successful with relatively low risk.
CHAPTER 10 TECHNICAL INDICATORS 179
HH
LH
LH
11A P T E R
TECHNICAL PATTERNS
CANDLESTICKS
Candlesticks were developed as a means to perform technical analysis,
thanks to the Japanese, who first used them to trade rice in the seventeenth
century. A rice trader named Homma from the town of Sakata has been
credited with their development and charting style. Afterwards, Charles
Dow started his own version around 1900, using very similar principles.
Through years of trading and refining, they have been evolving up to the
presentation that you can see today.
The basic principles behind candlesticks are as follows:
● Price action is more important than the reason behind the moves.
● All the fundamental data are already reflected in the price.
● Markets move because of expectations and emotions of fear and greed
in buyers and sellers.
● Markets fluctuate.
● The actual price doesn’t always reflect the real value of a currency.
181
182 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
shadow, and the low is marked by the bottom of the lower shadow. If the
close price is higher than the open price, the candlestick is bullish, and its
body will be drawn as hollow; if the open price is higher than the close
price, the candlestick will be bearish and will be drawn with a filled body.
HIGH HIGH
OPEN
CLOSE
OPEN CLOSE
LOW LOW
BULLISH BEARISH
GENERAL OVERVIEW
Long versus Short Bodies
Long-bodied candlesticks show a strong buying or selling pressure. The
longer they are, the greater distance there is between the open and close
prices, indicating a significant advance in prices and more aggressive
moves. Usually longer candlesticks will show in the direction of the gen-
eral trend (hollow are bullish and filled are bearish), but this also depends
on their position in the overall pattern of the chart. This type of candle-
stick can signal a potential support level or a reversal after an extended
rise or fall.
Marubozu candlesticks are even more powerful because they don’t
have any shadows or wicks, thus signaling that control of the price action
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 183
of the market is in the hands of buyers or sellers for the complete period
they represent.
Short-bodied candlesticks indicate a stalling market where there has
been very little change in prices during the period.
market
indecision
There are candlesticks with long shadows and a very small body, called
spinning tops. Such candles represent indecision in the market and that
both buyers and sellers were highly active during the period represented,
driving prices much higher and much lower than the open and close prices
but closing near the opening price in the end. A spinning top signals a pos-
sible change in the actual trend, especially if it shows after a long hollow or
filled candlestick.
184 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Doji
This type of candlestick alone is a neutral pattern. The candlestick forms
when the open and close prices are practically at the same level, with various
types of shadows, long or short depending on the price action during that
period. The candlestick looks like a cross, an inverted cross, or a plus sign;
sometimes even one of the shadows is not present, as in the case of a drag-
onfly doji.
doji
doji
BULLISH PATTERNS
See the Appendix.
BEARISH PATTERNS
See the Appendix.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 185
REVERSAL PATTERNS
See the Appendix.
CONTINUATION PATTERNS
See the Appendix.
CHARTISM PATTERNS
Chartism is a system of analysis and prediction for financial instruments
and is a part of technical analysis. It is based exclusively on the study of
patterns that are drawn by the curve of prices on a chart. Its use started at
the beginning of the twentieth century and was consolidated around the
1930s because the amplitude and depth of the crisis of 1929 generated the
need to evolve new analysis techniques in the stock market to get better
information than what was being offered by fundamental analysis.
Chartism is a graphic analysis that focuses solely on the prices and vol-
umes of transactions. Its purpose is to determine the price trend, that is, to
gauge if it is in a bullish or a bearish phase, and help to identify the move-
ments that the price wave realizes at the moment of a trend reversal. It is
based exclusively on the study of the patterns that are drawn by those price
waves. The entire set of patterns is studied and codified in detail, and each
one of them indicates the possible future evolution of prices with a given
risk factor.
Chartism has three basic principles:
1. All the elements that affect a particular asset are reflected and
included in the price.
2. Price rates move in trends.
3. Movements and patterns of price rates always repeat themselves.
With these principles, the chartist analysis affirms that if you know the
price, you do not need to analyze why it is moving because it is enough to
be able to identify clearly the trend of the particular rate and check how it
is moving so as to control and anticipate any changes in trend. Chartists
believe that by studying past actions, the future probable behavior of the
market can be predicted. For this, several chart patterns are used and stud-
ied in detail.
186 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
REVERSAL PATTERNS
DOUBLE AND TRIPLE TOPS OR BOTTOMS
Double tops and double bottoms are major reversal patterns that form after
long-term trends. They are made up of two consecutive peaks or down
moves mostly to an equal price with a recession between extreme points.
They usually indicate a change in trend from bullish to bearish, or vice
versa, but a reversal will not be confirmed as long as the key supports or
resistances are not broken.
The recession between the two extreme points must be at least 10 percent
because a shorter distance could represent a normal bump into a resistance or
a support. In addition, there must be a certain indication that there has been
an increase in the selling or buying pressure before the price attempts a sec-
ond time to break the resistance or support level.
The need for confirmation of a definite break of the support or resis-
tance helps to prevent making a decision too early. The trend remains in
place as long as those levels hold.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 187
Triple tops or bottoms are a similar pattern that also indicates a possi-
ble reversal, but having three consecutive highs or lows followed by a break
of the support or resistance. Triple tops usually are formed on shorter time
frames, unlike triple bottoms.
Before forming completely, the pattern will look like a double top or a
double bottom. You also can find a pattern made up of three equal highs or
lows in a rectangle or in an ascending or descending triangle. The triple top
or bottom, like the double top or bottom, should be observed, and you
should wait for a breakout to occur. If there is a failure to break above or
below the peaks, the reversal is near, but only after support or resistance has
been broken will you really have confirmation of the move.
Rising wedges will form after a continued uptrend, where you can see
that prices stall at the horizontal level, indicating that the power of the bull-
ish sentiment is fading away. This horizontal level will act as a resistance
that holds, and the slope acting as support has to be broken to confirm a
change in trend. Falling wedges, on the contrary, will form after a contin-
ued downtrend, and prices will tend to agglomerate at the same level, form-
ing the horizontal boundary of the wedge, which will be the holding
support. The falling slope resistance has to be broken to confirm the
change in trend. In both cases, one should wait for the break to be retested
through a correction move to confirm that either the support has become a
new resistance or the resistance has become a new support. Volume is more
important in confirming the breakout of a falling wedge.
Both falling and rising wedges are consolidation patterns where either
side of the market, depending on the case, is losing strength and momen-
tum. They are particularly difficult to recognize because the trend appar-
ently is continuing and there are still higher lows on rising wedges and
lower highs on falling wedges. However, the failure to cross the boundary
formed by the horizontal line is a signal that upside or downside momen-
tum is losing its potential, and finally, when the resistance or support is
broken, you can see that the contrarian side of the market has won, and
prices will cross up or move down against the prevailing trend.
BUMP-AND-RUN REVERSAL
The bump-and-run reversal (BARR) was developed by Thomas Bulkowski.
It was originally named bump and run formation (BARF), but such an
acronym wouldn’t have gotten much approval on Wall Street, so he changed
it to BARR, although the original name would have been quite representa-
tive of what happens in the markets when this kind of formation occurs.
The pattern develops in three phases: lead-in, bump, and the final run.
The first phase can be quite long and is the base off which the trendline is
formed. There is a steady and slow advance in prices and no particular sur-
prises or excessive surges. The angle that Bulkowski determined to be opti-
mal is 30 to 45 degrees of steepness.
The second phase is a sharp and sudden advance, where prices move fur-
ther away from the trendline, creating a steeper angle, usually nearly doubling
the previous one (around 45 to 60 degrees). The bump represents the unsus-
tainability of such an advance for a long time, and prices hit a high and decline
a little bit. Prices make a small peak or a series of descending peaks toward the
initial trendline. Volume in this phase is usually low, whereas it increases in
the previous advance and in the subsequent second attempt to rise higher.
192 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
The final phase is the run, and prices start declining heavily with an
increase in volume and reach the trendline, which then is broken. A retest
of the broken trend line will confirm the run, and support will transform in
resistance. This is usually followed by a period of consolidation, as you can
see in the figure above. The decrease in prices most commonly will be
equivalent to the previous long advance.
CONTINUATION PATTERNS
FLAGS AND PENNANTS
Flags and pennants are usually short-term continuation patterns that indi-
cate a small consolidation of the markets before a resumption of the previ-
ous move. This consolidation has to be preceded by a steep advance or
decline with heavy volume and strength and commonly marks a midpoint
of the overall move.
The first part of the move is called the flagpole, and it represents the
distance from the first break of a resistance or a support to the highest high
or lowest low of the flag or pennant. The previous breakout is one of the
conditions necessary for this pattern to be considered valid.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 193
TRIANGLES
Symmetric
A symmetric triangle commonly is formed as a continuation pattern along
the evolution of a trend. It must have at least two lower highs and two higher
lows. When you connect those points, the lines will converge to form a sym-
metric triangle. Price range is wider at the beginning and goes on contract-
ing near the end point. There are also some conditions in which symmetric
triangles indicate an important trend reversal. The direction of the next move
will be determined only after there has been a breakout of the converging
range. The volume will be decreasing progressively as the triangle extends
in a tight consolidation. This is a medium- to long-term pattern.
The breakout of the tightening range usually happens midway or near
the 75 percent point of triangle development. The time duration will be
evaluated from the point where both upper and lower lines converge back
to the start of the lower trendline base. If the break occurs much earlier than
the 50 percent point, the signal may be a weak or nonvalid one. Volume
should be increasing as well, particularly in the case of breakouts on the
long side. Confirmation of the validity of the move will be given by a retest
and hold of the convergence point that was previously broken, the resis-
tance becoming support or vice versa, and a resumption in the direction of
the breakout.
You can estimate the potential target of the breakout move by measur-
ing the widest side of the triangle and adding it to or subtracting it from the
level of the breakout point. Another way of calculating a possible target is
to draw a parallel trendline to the pattern in the direction of the breakout
that passes through the opposite point on the widest part of the triangle (the
higher price if the breakout was to the upside, the lower price if the break-
out was down). The distance to this trendline will give you the potential
scope of the move.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 195
Ascending
An ascending triangle is a bullish pattern that usually develops during an
uptrend. It is a continuation pattern. These formations indicate a gradual
accumulation. The shape is that of a right-angle triangle. There is a horizon-
tal line at the top built off at least two equal highs; the higher lows go build-
ing up the ascending slope, which converges toward the horizontal line.
There has to be an ongoing trend for this pattern to be validated as a
continuation signal. The highs that form the horizontal upper line should be
quite near one from the other, with a reaction low between them. The
ascending slope has to contain at least two reaction lows that are progres-
sively higher. If any reaction low is equal to or lower than the previous one,
the validity of the ascending triangle is canceled.
The volume goes on contracting as the pattern evolves and then expands
as soon as the breakout occurs. This will confirm the pattern, and the break-
out level should be retested for a more solid confirmation. The price projec-
tion to determine the scope of the move after the price has broken the
resistance is calculated by measuring the widest distance of the triangle and
adding it to the price level at the breakout.
The ascending triangle has already been showing a bullish tendency
before a breakout occurs. The reaction lows are continually rising, even if
the horizontal line is signaling a level of supply, and prices cannot move
forward for a while. The continuous ascension of the lows indicates an
increase in the buying pressure and qualifies this pattern as bullish.
Descending
Descending triangles usually are formed in a downtrend and are continua-
tion patterns. On a few occasions, they can signify a reversal, but the most
common behavior is bearish. They signal distribution after accumulation.
Inversely to ascending triangles, the pattern is composed of two or
more equal lows that form a horizontal line at the bottom of the moves. The
descending trendline has a series of two or more successively decreasing
peaks that converge with the horizontal line. If one of the peaks in the
downslope goes above the previous high, the pattern will lose its validity.
The volume, as in ascending triangles, goes on contracting as the pat-
tern evolves. An expansion of volume would occur just before the breakout
of the end point of the triangle. The broken support line then will be retested,
turning into resistance, which will confirm the pattern. The projected target
of the breakout move can be measured relative to the widest range of the pat-
tern, which then will be subtracted from the level of support.
196 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
RECTANGLES
The rectangle is a consolidation and continuation pattern. It signals a pause
in the current trend and is formed from two equal or equivalent lows and
two equal or equivalent highs that can be connected, making the top and
bottom of a rectangle. There is congestion in prices, and a consolidation of
the levels is reached
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 197
The rectangle usually forms a very tight range contained in the four
point boundaries. The volume is quite low, and the price tends to bounce
alternatively between support and resistance. The increase in volume
occurs near the breakout point and can be an indication of the direction that
the prices will take after surpassing the support or resistance level.
The longer the duration of the pattern, the stronger the impulse the
breakout will show. The level will be retested afterwards, providing a con-
firmation if it holds.
198 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
PRICE CHANNELS
Price channels are patterns that usually determine a continuation of a trend.
They are delimited by an upper and lower trendline that serves as a bound-
ary where prices are contained, the upper trendline being a resistance and
the lower trendline being a support.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 199
The form of the cup ideally should be smooth and rounded, ensuring that
this is indeed a consolidation pattern going through several periods and form-
ing the support at the bottom. In a perfect shape, both highs on the sides of the
cup would be equal, but this is not always the case; the pattern will be valid if
a handle range is formed afterwards, independent of whether the highs of the
cup match or not. The usual retracement marked by the depth of the cup is
one-third or one-half the previous rising move. The handle is similar to a flag
or pennant with a downward slope, although it can be shorter sometimes. It is
a final consolidation that takes place before a strong breakout. The smaller
this retracement is, the stronger the bullish sentiment of the formation. It is
recommended that you wait for the break above the resistance line formed by
the highs of the cup to confirm the validity of this pattern. Also, there should
be a significant increase in volume when this breakout occurs.
The projected scope of the subsequent breakout move can be measured
with respect to the distance in points from the bottom of the cup to the right
high of the cup before the handle.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 201
Volumes
The volume ideally increases at the beginning of the first phase, diminishes
in the second phase, especially at the end, and rises again at the beginning
of the third or continuation phase. Volume confirmation is more important
in bullish than in bearish patterns.
Both bullish and bearish measured moves can contain a series of dif-
ferent patterns. You can find double bottoms or double tops at the start,
price channels during the reversal consolidation or correction, ascending or
descending triangles at the end of the consolidation or retracement, and
again price channels in the continuation phase.
ELLIOTT WAVES
HISTORY
The Elliott wave theory was developed by Ralph Nelson Elliott in the late
1920s when he discovered the existence of a repetitive and cyclic behavior
in the stock markets that formerly was considered to be mostly random and
chaotic, a behavior that depends on the reactions of investors at a particular
moment and thus is a result of mass psychology. Elliott studied the struc-
ture of those repetitive patterns that show up as waves within waves and can
repeat themselves indefinitely, showing two specific characteristics,
impulse and correction, and applied this to market prediction.
COUNTING WAVES
Elliott wave theory is interpreted as follows:
● Every action is followed by a reaction.
● Five impulsive waves move in the direction of the main trend and are
followed by three corrective waves (a 5–3 move).
● A 5–3 move signals completion of a cycle.
● This 5–3 move then becomes two subdivisions of the next higher
5–3 wave.
● The underlying 5–3 pattern remains constant, independent of the time
scale you are using.
204 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
5
B
3
4 A
1
C
In the figure above, you can see that the three waves that go in the
direction of the trend are impulses, so these waves also will have five waves
within them. The waves against the trend are corrections and are made up
of three waves.
Elliott wave theory assigns a series of categories to the waves from
largest to smallest. These are grand supercycle, supercycle, cycle, primary,
intermediate, minor, minute, minuette, and subminuette.
FIBONACCI
In mathematics, Fibonacci numbers are a sequence of numbers in which
the first number is 0, the second number is 1, and each subsequent number
is the result of the sum of the previous two numbers. The Fibonacci
sequence of numbers is as follows: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144,
etc. Each term in this sequence is simply the sum of the two preceding
terms, and the sequence continues infinitely. Each subsequent number in
this series has a common relationship with the others in that they all are
approximately 1.618 times greater than the preceding number, which also
corresponds to the golden ratio value.
The key Fibonacci ratio of 61.8 percent—also referred to as the golden
ratio or the golden mean—is found by dividing one number in the series by
the number that follows it. For example, 8/13 ⫽ 0.6153, and 55/89 ⫽ 0.6179.
The 38.2 percent ratio is found by dividing one number in the series by the
number that is found two places to the right; for example: 55/144 ⫽ 0.3819.
The 23.6 percent ratio is found by dividing one number in the series by the
number that is three places to the right, for example, 8/34 ⫽ 0.2352.
The sequence was named after Leonardo of Pisa, known as Fibonacci
(a contraction of filius Bonaccio, “son of Bonaccio”), who introduced the
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 205
RETRACEMENTS
It has been observed that currency pairs or stocks exhibit a recurrent behav-
ior, pulling back or retracing a certain percentage of the last move before
resuming the trend. These are the Fibonacci levels, which usually occur
most often at three levels—38.2, 50, and 61.8 percent; 50 percent is not a
Fibonacci number but represents the tendency of prices to go back to the
mean and reverse after having retraced half the move.
206 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
EXPANSION
CHANNELS
FANS
208 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
Fibonacci fans are formed with three diagonal lines using Fibonacci ratios
to help identify major levels of support and resistance. They are created
by drawing an imaginary trendline between the high and low and then
dividing the vertical distance between those two points by the major
Fibonacci ratios: 38.2, 50, and 61.8 percent. Each of these divisions will
represents a point in the imaginary vertical line that measures the distance
between the high and the low, and the lines indicate levels of support and
resistance.
ARCS
Fibonacci arcs consist of three curved lines with the same Fibonacci num-
ber proportions that will help anticipate ranging areas and important
support and resistance levels. They are created by drawing an imaginary
trendline between the high and low and then drawing the curves that
will intersect this trendline at the major Fibonacci levels: 38.2, 50, and
61.8 percent. Trading decisions are made when the price crosses through
those levels.
top of the first impulsive wave is what determines the kind of pattern you
should expect.
BUTTERFLY
In the butterfly pattern, the first corrective wave from A to B is a deep
retracement to 0.786, or 78.6 percent, of the move from the starting point
0 to A. If this happens, the second corrective move from C to D would have
to reach 1.272 percent retracement of the first impulse wave from 0 to A. In
this pattern, the projections from point B to point C can vary, but the
Fibonacci ratios relative to the first impulse wave from 0 to A are always
formed at those precise levels.
The following figure shows a bullish butterfly pattern, where the first
impulse wave from 0 to A is pointing upward. A bearish butterfly would have
the same measurements but would be inverted, starting from a downward
move, as shown in the model.
bearish
BUTTERFLY
A 0.0
C
direction of impulse
(bullish)
0.786
0 B 100.0
starting point
1.272
D
210 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
GARTLEY
This is an exact pattern where the first A-to-B corrective wave is always the
61.8 percent retracement of the move from 0 to A. The second corrective
wave from C to D then should form at 0.786 of the move from 0 to A. Both
corrective waves always will form precisely at those levels.
bearish
GARTLEY
A C 0.0 100.0
0.886
direction of impulse
(bullish)
0.618 0.0
B
0.786
D100.0
0
starting point
The figure image shows a bullish Gartley pattern, where the first
impulse wave from 0 to A is pointing upward. A bearish Gartley would
have the same measurements but would be inverted, starting from a down-
ward move, as shown in the model.
BAT
In the bat pattern, the first corrective wave from A to B is a small correc-
tion, and it retraces most of the time to the 0.382 level (as a maximum to
0.50). If this happens, the second corrective wave from C to D should form
at the 0.886 Fibonacci retracement of 0 to A.
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 211
bearish
THE BAT
A 100.0 0.0
0.886
C
0.382
direction of impulse
0.0
0.50
(bullish)
B
0.886
D100.0
0
starting point
The figure image shows a bullish bat pattern, with a first impulse wave
from starting point 0 to A pointing upward. If the first impulse wave were
pointing downward, the same calculations for the retracements would apply,
and the pattern would be inverted, as shown in the model.
CRAB
The crab pattern is not found very often, and it can be identified only
when the complete five-wave structure has been finished. This happens
because the main factor that allows us to identify this pattern is the second
corrective wave from C to D, which is a very deep move, retracing up to
1.618 of the first wave from 0 to A. The first corrective wave from A to B
can vary between 0.382 and 0.618, making its level completely subjective.
What counts is the exact position of the last move for the pattern to be
considered correct.
The figure above shows a bullish crab pattern, with a first impulse
wave from starting point 0 to A pointing upward. If the first impulse wave
were pointing downward, the same calculations for the retracements would
apply, and the pattern would be inverted, as shown in the model.
212 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
bearish
CRAB
A 0.0
C
0.382
0.618
B
100.0 direction of impulse
0 (bullish)
starting point
D
1.618
AB ⫽ CD
B AB = CD
0.0
38.2
50.0
61.8
C
78.6
100.0
A
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 213
This is a pattern where both impulse waves are equal. It is quite common to
find and easy to recognize, and it is one of the most powerful patterns in
trading. The retracement wave between both legs can vary from 0.382 to
0.786, although in a strongly trending market it doesn’t usually go much
further than a 38.2 percent retracement.
Basic characteristics are as follows:
● Both AB and CD must be equal.
● The retracement cannot go further than the price of the starting point.
This means that the price can’t retrace more than 100 percent.
● Point D has to be higher than point B on a bullish move or lower on a
bearish move for the pattern to be valid.
THREE DRIVES
This pattern consists of three consecutive impulse waves followed by a
small correction. The noticeable aspect of this pattern is that each subse-
quent drive reaches either a 127.2 or a 161.8 percent Fibonacci retrace-
ment. In addition, each of the waves should form over equivalent time
periods and be symmetric one to the other.
3 1.272
2 100.0 1.272
1 100.0
0.0
0.0
Three Drives
214 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
FRACTALS
BILL WILLIAMS AND CHAOS THEORY
The idea of fractals was discussed by Bill M. Williams, Ph.D., in his book,
Trading Chaos. From his point of view, he defines an up fractal as a
middle bar with two lower highs on each side of it and a down fractal as a
middle bar with two higher lows on each side of it. Chaos traditionally is
seen as a lack of structure or order, but Williams considers chaos to be a
higher degree of order instead, where there is no relationship between cause
and effect because the financial markets pertain to a nonlinear and thus
nonpredictable situation.
Bill Williams goes against most of the theories of technical analysts in
that he believes that the markets can’t be predictable and that a past behav-
ior can’t determine a future behavior. He affirms that the only way to
achieve a success in the financial markets is to understand and explore its
five-dimensional structure, which consists of the following elements: the
fractal or space phase; the driving-force or power phase; acceleration or
deceleration, which would be the power phase; the zone, which is a combi-
nation of strength and power phase; and finally, the balance line.
FRACTALS
A fractal is an indicator developed by Bill Williams for his own trading sys-
tem, and it allows you to detect the bottom or top of a move. Basic fractals
are composed of five bars. They can be identified with the following rules:
● A pattern forms with a highest high in the middle and two lower highs
on each side; this would be a bearish probable reversal point.
● A pattern forms with a lowest low in the middle and two higher lows
on each side; this would be a bullish probable reversal point.
Fractals help to identify the underlying fluctuations in price waves and
also allow larger trends to be broken down into simple and predictable
reversal patterns. They can be used in three different ways:
1. Catch the trending. Depending on the series of fractals that are
successively broken, you can identify whether the trend is bullish or
bearish. More up fractals will be broken in an uptrend, and more
down fractals will be broken in a downtrend. The more they are
broken, the stronger the trend will be.
2. Catch the range. Fractals can help to identify a consolidation area and
will set resistance and support points between which the price will
move. If the price can’t seem to break above or below the most recent
CHAPTER 11 TECHNICAL PATTERNS 215
the open because there will be more sellers than buyers on that last bar. A
down bar is a bar that has a lower high and a lower low than the preceding
bar. Down bars signal a downtrend. The close will be lower than the open,
and on the last bar of the trend, the close will be higher than the open
because there will be more buyers than sellers on that last bar.
Inside bars represent a market deliberation or indecision. The market is
also denominated a narrow-range bar, in which its high is lower than the
preceding bar and its low is higher than the preceding bar. An outside bar
or engulfing bar has a higher high and a lower low than the preceding bar.
When the open is in the bottom quarter or third of the bar and the close is
in the top quarter or third of the bar, the engulfing bar is bullish engulfing,
and the buyers are in control; conversely, when the open is in the top quar-
ter or third of the bar and the close is in the bottom quarter or third, the
engulfing bar is bearish engulfing, and the sellers are in control.
When the trend is going on, it will be continuously making higher
highs and higher lows if it is an uptrend or lower highs and lower lows in
the case of a downtrend. When the price stops making those higher/lower
highs and lows, the trend is said to be broken. Then comes usually a period
of consolidation or ranging, which thereafter resumes in the same direc-
tion, as a continuation of the previous trend, or either breaks out in the
opposite direction in the case of a reversal. You can use multiple time
frames to help you understand the behavior of prices and determine if they
are trending or ranging.
It is perfectly possible that one time frame is trending in one direction
and the other higher or lower time frame is trending in the opposite direc-
tion or is showing a consolidation pattern. There are infinite trends within
trends. Price can be rising on a daily chart but meanwhile in a retracement
or correction on a smaller time frame.
The best way to start to understand naked price action is to practice
visually and observe the behavior patterns in several time frames simulta-
neously, determining the trend that is showing in each of them. For exam-
ple, a 15-minute price action can be showing only two trends; meanwhile,
the 5-minute price action is possibly showing five different trends for the
same period. You can, of course, trade the smaller time-frame trends, but
waiting for every time frame to align in the same direction as the larger
time frame is signaling would be really trading with the trend.
Trading naked is the ultimate way to trade because in the end, everything
can be narrowed down to the price. Any technical indicator or instrument is
always directly related to price behavior and will only reflect what is already
shown in the numbers.
C H
12 A P T E R
SUPPORT AND
RESISTANCE
Two of the most important subjects of FOREX technical analysis are sup-
port and resistance, which refer to the price levels at which there seems to
be a barrier beyond which the price of a currency pair may not keep falling
or rising. They are often viewed as quite complex because despite the obvi-
ous simplicity behind the concept, support and resistance can be deter-
mined in several ways, and it is not always easy to understand how they
work or to master their use.
Support and resistance are key levels, mostly price areas or zones instead
of a particular single price, where supply and demand meet and are of equal
strength, neutralizing each other’s forces. Supply is when traders are selling
the base currency; demand is when a currency is being bought. Prices change
when there is an imbalance between supply and demand, and one of the sides
win. Prices rise when demand is higher and decrease when supply is greater.
When both are at the same level, the market is said to be moving sideways,
and there is a struggle between bulls and bears to take control.
SUPPORT
Support is the level where demand has acquired enough strength to stop the
prices from decreasing further. As the price gets cheaper, more buyers are
looking to hold the currency, and fewer sellers want to give it away. When
217
218 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
the prices reach the support level, usually the demand and supply tend to
get even or the number of buyers overcomes the number of sellers, and this
will prevent the price from falling through the support level.
However, support levels sometimes are broken, which indicates that the
selling pressure is still strong and that the bearish sentiment has taken over
the bullish impulse. There is a renewal of the incentive to sell, and buyers
stop wanting to acquire the currency. Since breakouts occur with a certain
momentum, it is not until the next lower support level that buyers might
come back into the picture, and the same struggle will present itself
between bulls and bears. If the support holds, then there will be a bounce
from the support, and the bullish sentiment will have won the battle.
Support levels are established under the current price, but since the
support levels are not set at an exact price but rather mostly in an area of
possible prices, volatility could cause prices to drop a little below a given
support level without effectively breaking it. This is why it is preferable to
establish support zones. A small dip will have no strength to indicate a
breakout; usually a certain number of points and other confirmatory indica-
tors are needed to really consider that a support level has been broken. The
most common confirmation is a retest and bounce from the support level
after it has been crossed. At that moment, the support becomes resistance.
RESISTANCE
Resistance is the level where selling pressure acquires enough strength to
stop the price from a further increase. As the price goes up and keeps
advancing toward resistance, more sellers will want to enter the market,
and fewer buyers will be willing to buy. At the moment the price reaches
the resistance level, as happens with support, both sides tend to get even,
and sellers even may overcome the number of buyers, thus bouncing back
and driving the prices lower.
When resistance does not hold, and a new buying surge pushes the
market, the price will break above the resistance, signaling that the bullish
sentiment has won the battle and bears are not interested in selling any-
more. Buyers will be buying at higher prices until they reach a further
resistance level, which will form after the initial momentum of the second
move fades away.
Resistance levels are established above the current price, but in the
same way that happens with support levels. You should consider resis-
tance levels more like a zone, and small rallies or peaks through the level
CHAPTER 12 SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE 219
TRENDLINES
A trendline is an ascending or descending price level that can be drawn
between at least two lower highs in a downtrend or two higher lows in an
uptrend. This level then is seen as a constant barrier that prevents the price
from going higher or lower, forming a certain range that can be parallel or
converging in the case of triangular formations.
The level formed by this trendline constitutes a support or a resistance
and usually is a place where the prices will bounce back in the opposite
direction. An upper resistance is formed every time the price action slows
down and pulls back to the trendline in an uptrend and every time a bearish
move runs out of steam and moves back to the lower highs trendline in a
downtrend. This occurs because of profit-taking or market uncertainty after
a prolonged move, creating a defined range between the trendlines and the
series of tops or bottoms.
Traders usually will watch for the prices to reach the top or bottom lev-
els of the range and buy or sell accordingly when other confirmatory con-
ditions are met.
MOVING AVERAGES
Moving averages can be of help in identifying levels of support and resis-
tance. In either of its forms, a moving average is a reflection of the
dynamic price level that has the greater incidence. When the trend is
going up, the price finds its support at the moving average. This indicator
acts as a resistance when the trend is going down. Some values—or num-
ber of periods averaged—will work better than others and also depend on
the relative time frames. Experimentation is needed to find which moving
average is best suited to show the levels of support and resistance in each
particular trading situation, but there are specific periods, such as the
exponential moving average (EMA) or the simple moving average (SMA)
200 (which can signify 200 days, weeks, hours, or minutes with regard to
220 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
the distinct time frames), that seem to work independently of the time
variable. I personally like how the prices behave when near the SMA 34;
I find this value quite appropriate to predict bounces and potential targets
for taking profits or exiting a position.
OTHER INDICATORS
Many other indicators can be used to identify areas of support and resis-
tance. One of them is the Fibonacci retracement tool, which was described
in detail in Chapter 11.
Being able to determine future levels of support or resistance is an
important way to improve FOREX trading returns by getting a more accu-
rate view of the possible levels that can be reached and the most probable
reaction of the prices when those levels are hit. In this way, targets and
stops can be set in a more precise form, and a trader can avoid entering a
position at places where the price is more likely to reverse.
Independent of the method you use to foresee the levels where price is
going to encounter a pressure against its current direction, in all of them the
significance of the support or resistance is the same: Those are the levels
beyond which the price of the currency pair or financial asset that you are
trading probably will not move in either direction.
CHAPTER 12 SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE 221
ENTERING POSITIONS
The establishment of areas of support and resistance allows traders to
choose a more precise entry point for their positions. The forces of sup-
ply and demand show clear patterns and can be predicted, provided that
other indicators or patterns confirm the potential reversal or continuation
of a trend.
When the market is alternating inside those extreme zones, there is
certain stability between supply and demand. When the forces of supply
overcome the forces of demand, or vice versa, there is a breakout of the
range delineated by support and resistance, and other zones are reached
that will act as such, and the broken levels will turn into their opposite.
There is an old adage that says, “Buy low; sell high.” This means buy
at the support level, and sell at the resistance level, provided that the condi-
tions maintaining the prices inside a given range are still valid. Breakout
entries would respond to the inverse—sell low; buy high—after the break-
out point. How can you determine that a particular support or resistance is
holding or if its weakness will lead to a breakout? You saw in Chapter 11
that many technical patterns can help to identify the potential weakness or
strength of a certain move.
A rejection of the support or resistance level, followed by a retest and
subsequent bounce back inside the channel, is a good indication to enter a
position. Candlestick patterns of reversal and moving averages, as well as
pivot lines and any oscillator that can show an oversold or overbought con-
dition, will help in the decision. In the case of a breakout, a break of the
trendline, followed by a retest of the trendline from above or below, and the
subsequent bounce back with the former support becoming resistance or
the former resistance turning into support is also a good confirmation for
an entry point, with the help of the preceding indicators to ensure a safer
decision.
Identifying main support and resistance levels is a key element leading
to a successful technical analysis. When you are aware of their existence
and location, it is much easier to forecast and be prepared when prices
move near those levels. Look for extra signs of an increase in the buying or
selling pressure and potential reversal and volume of transactions. When a
support or resistance level has been broken, this signals that there has been
a change in the relationship between supply and demand. A resistance
breakout signals that the bulls are stronger than the bears, and a support
break indicates that the bears have won the battle.
222 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
EXITING POSITIONS
Support and resistance levels provide excellent areas to set target profits or
simply exit a position manually. You can either chose to trade a single posi-
tion or split it into two or more parts, which you will be exiting progres-
sively at every level based on a preset plan.
When setting a stop loss based on support and resistance, the stop level
should be set a few points (usually 5 or 10 depending on the time frame that
you will be using) below or above the most recent strong point of support
or resistance. This can be determined through observation of the levels
where the price has stalled most often or with the use of fractals, Fibonacci
levels, pivots, and psychological levels.
A target profit will be set inversely, a few points below a strong pro-
jected resistance, pivot, or Fibonacci level or above a support that has
proven to be holding. It is important not to forget the spread of the particu-
lar currency pair that you are trading and the side, or direction, on which
your trades are placed because what is commonly defined as actual price is
usually the bid price on most platforms. For example, on short positions,
the price used to close will be the ask or offer price, so be sure to add or
subtract the spread from any calculations.
When there is a strong expectation of a continued trend, positions can be
split into several parts, and actions can be performed sequentially on each of
them. For example, with this approach, a trader would exit one of the parts
at the first perceived strong resistance or support level and set the stop losses
on the remaining parts of the trade to breakeven (the entry price) or, better,
to one positive point, thereafter exiting the next part at the next support or
resistance level and trailing the stop losses or simply letting the free trades
run to gather the most possible profits from the overall position.
(especially because there are differences among most brokers on prices that
can go as far as 10 to 12 pips).
I want to point out that this is my personal opinion: I check the pivots
but personally prefer the psychological levels to work with short term in 1
minute increments also known as M1, which I consider to be small pivots
in themselves.
Price goes in waves, not linearly. When price action is observed in a
very small time frame, you can see that at every lower level, a “decision”
must be made, a price is approved or rejected. Bulls or bears win the small
battle, then go on to the next level or come back to the previous one, and
later on “decide” to retest again until the level breaks or the opposite party
wins and rejects the “proposed” price, just like a staircase. Then the key
levels (previous bigger staircases on larger time frames) are made by the
support or resistance levels that held through many attempts at being
crossed.
Pivots are, like Fibonacci lines, the result of a calculation made based
on an analysis of historical data, and in a certain way and because of it, they
can become a self-fulfilling prediction because everyone is watching the
224 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
same prices and has the same information. Thus, indeed, the best pivots
will be those that are used by the greater number of traders.
For me, it’s more logical to start the day when the FOREX day “offi-
cially” starts in Sydney through the New York close (5 p.m. Eastern Time).
In my opinion, this doesn’t matter much because in the end, you won’t have
more than 24 hours in a daily candle.
The pivot indicator is based on the high-low and close price of the daily
candle (calculated with respect to every different set of settings and based
on 24 sequential hourly candles), which will show differently on each plat-
form according to its own time zone.
The “daily session” consists of the whole day (all the markets
involved), and personally, I don’t think that two hours difference can make
much noise unless there’s a huge move at the end of the day (New York
close), and even then, I don’t think it would matter because it would be
compensated by the hours not taken from the preceding day.
Settings that start at Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) 00:00 (eight hours
before the London session) are perhaps a more normalized time where
more people calculate the pivots (you would have to know how many bro-
kers start the day with GMT 00:00). Mine starts with the Sydney session
two hours earlier because it seems more logical to me, since most markets
CHAPTER 12 SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE 225
open on Sunday at the Sydney open and close on Friday at the New York
close. Other people may like to base the close/open of the daily candle on
the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) close at 4 p.m. Eastern Time. The
more people who use the same setting, the more probabilities there will be
for a pivot price to become predictable. This works exactly like the
Fibonacci levels.
Since I see pivots more as a range level (or zone) than a particular
exact price (and I prefer to take into account the psychological levels any-
way), it doesn’t bother me much if my pivot is 5 pips up or 5 pips down
(because, anyway, prices between brokers differ sometimes by as much as
10 or more pips, and in some, there can be huge spikes that don’t show on
the others; this in respect to high highs and low lows). Therefore, it’s
really relative, and real support/resistances, which can be seen on the
charts at the levels the price went and bounced back, in my opinion are
more accurate.
Exactly the same is true for Fibonacci levels. It is impossible to calcu-
late prices to the pip because of all the preceding. You can easily take a look
at several sites that show the daily pivots, and there will be differences
among them, too.
STANDARD FIBONACCI
R3 H + 2 (Pivot – L) R3 Pivot + 1.000 * (H – L)
R2 Pivot + (H – L R2 Pivot + 0.618 * (H – L)
R1 (2 × Pivot) – L R1 Pivot + 0.382 * (H – L)
Pivot (H + L + C) / 3 Pivot (H + L + C) / 3
S1 (2 x Pivot) – H S1 Pivot – 0.382 * (H – L)
S2 Pivot – (H – L) S2 Pivot – 0.618 * (H – L)
S3 L – 2(H – L) S3 Pivot – 1.000 * (H – L)
CAMARILLA WOODIE
R4 R4 = C + RANGE * 1.1/2 R4 R3 + RANGE
R3 R3 = C + RANGE * 1.1/4 R3 R1 + RANGE
R2 R2 = C + RANGE * 1.1/6 R2 PP + RANGE
R1 R1 = C + RANGE * 1.1/12 R1 R1 = (2 * PP) – LOW
Pivot (H + L + C) / 3 Pivot (H + L + C) / 3
S1 R1 = C – RANGE * 1.1/12 S1 R1 = (2 * PP) – HIGH
S2 R2 = C – RANGE * 1.1/6 S2 PP – RANGE
S3 R3 = C – RANGE * 1.1/4 S3 S1 – RANGE
S4 R4 = C – RANGE * 1.1/2 S4 S3 – RANGE
226 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
PSYCHOLOGICAL LEVELS
You might have noticed that you are constantly rounding off numbers in
your daily activities. You tend to see round numbers as more perfect and
whole and are invariably drawn to use them, especially numbers that end in
zero. These round numbers also play an important role in FOREX trading.
If you take a look at previous support and resistance levels, you might
discover a common characteristic that prices have with respect to certain
prices: They can be seen as usually having difficulty moving past a round
price, such as, for example, $100. Other strong levels are prices ending in
5, or quarter prices, such as 25 or 75. There is also a curious behavior that
I have noticed that I can only associate with Fibonacci levels around prices
ending on 66 and 33. All these are said to be psychological levels. Human
beings also tend to be attracted to numbers that are factors of 10, a theory
suggested by the fact that we have 10 fingers and toes for counting.
Hitting a major 00 mark is a quite common goal, and often it will be
tested and tried until it is reached or crossed, only for the price to come
back soon afterwards because the final milestone was reached, and the mar-
ket continues toward its next new goal.
Supports and resistances are being created at those round-number
levels through the accumulation of pending limit or stop orders. This also
could be a reason why those levels are bounced off sometimes when they
CHAPTER 12 SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE 227
have been barely touched and, conversely, the price experiences a surge as
soon as it has crossed the level for a few points. Limit orders will be
placed a little below the higher round-number price or above the lower
round-number price, whereas stop orders usually are placed beyond
either level.
Most target prices or stop-loss orders are placed by market participants
at round-number price levels because these are perceived to be a fair value
and a more perfect price than nonround numbers. For example, the $100
mark will be more attractive to a trader than a price of $101.02 or $99.96.
Such large numbers of orders act as a strong price barrier and, when trig-
gered, will cause the price to bounce back. The levels are said to be psy-
chological because there is no other logical, technical, or fundamental
reason to explain the reaction of the market except for this simple attraction
to round numbers.
Banks are known for implementing most orders around these levels, as
can be seen from the relative volumes on the Interbank. Large pools of
orders accumulate, and when the price level is reached, they are triggered,
causing an avalanche in the contrarian direction, which is perceived on
charts as a strong bounce.
This is very important information for traders, who then can base their
strategies on this peculiarity of the markets and increase their profits by
going with the flow.
228 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
a better price. However, the best option is to use from three to four time
frames, especially when you are swing trading, because the perspective
will be much broader, and you will be able to understand how the market
moves.
For example, in a usual swing trading situation, where the main chart is
located in the daily time frame, you can use the weekly, daily, 1-hour, and
5-minute charts. Here is a short description of what you should look for in
each of those time frames, and if you are trading intraday, you can translate
the method to the series of smaller time frames.
Every time frame has an effect on every other time frame, from the
smaller ones to the bigger ones. Using smaller time frames for entries
allows you to enter at better prices, thus giving you the opportunity to use
much tighter stop losses than if you just traded off the main chart. Check
every time frame, and spot the support and resistance levels and chart and
candlesticks patterns. Finally, a good point of reference for general sup-
port and resistance is the SMA 200, which you should use in all time
frames. I personally also add the SMA 34 because I have found that the
prices always will bounce at least once from this particular moving aver-
age before resuming a move.
This type of multiple-chart analysis can improve your success as
a swing trader. Your main goal is to identify the areas of support and resis-
tance and to check if there is an alignment of your preferred setup on most
of the time frames chosen. The more all the time frames are in alignment,
CHAPTER 12 SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE 231
the greater the opportunity for success. Try to look at two additional time
frames along with your main chart. The lower time frame will be telling
you what is happening in the present, and the higher time frame will show
you what could happen in the future!
13 A P T E R
AUTOMATED TRADING
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234 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
One of the fields in which these data-analysis methods have been intro-
duced is the automated FOREX world. Neural networks consist of a large
number of processing units that are linked together by weighted probabili-
ties. They are a model that exhibits behavior that is similar to the working
and learning of the human brain. This model “thinks and learns” based on
the results of the previous actions.
Neural networks can be trained to interpret data and draw conclusions
from them. They are able to take in multiple streams of data and give a sin-
gle result as the outcome of their calculations. New forms of quantification
of those data can be added to the series of factors that the neural network
considers before it makes a decision, and the new forms will be processed
along with the previous ones. This is why neural networks are being used
increasingly in the FOREX to make price predictions.
The network is trained to adjust itself based on specific patterns that
form between the time of the input data and the output it generates. This is
quite time-consuming, but in the end, it will provide the neural network
with the ability to predict a future outcome based on historical data. When
it is presented with examples of pairs of input and output data, the network
can “learn” the dependencies and apply those dependencies when pre-
sented with new data. Thereafter, the network can compare the new data
with output it has generated previously and determine how far from or
close to the real data its prediction was, go back and adjust the relationships
among the various factors that determine the calculations, and keep on
adjusting until it reaches the correct answer and the output is equivalent to
the real event.
The training has to be performed with two different sets of data: the
data specifically used for training and the data that will be used in testing.
The neural network can continue to learn by continuously comparing the
predictions it makes with the data that are being given to the system. The
neural network also combines technical and fundamental data in its calcu-
lations; in this way, it can find additional patterns that might not have been
included in earlier considerations and apply them to the prediction, coming
up with very accurate results.
However, the output will be as good as the input data it is fed. The neural
network is very good at correlations independent of the amount of data you
are introducing in the process. It will be able to recognize patterns even
among extremely different types of information, even if there is no existing
relationship or particular pattern. Most important, the neural network can
apply its intelligence without clouding it with emotions. However, this can
become a weakness when unknown factors are introduced, such as, for
CHAPTER 13 AUTOMATED TRADING 237
6
A R T
BUILDING YOUR
PORTFOLIO
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C H
14 A P T E R
SECRETS TO FOREX
DIVERSIFICATION
FOREX OPTIONS
An option is a contract through which the buyer, by means of paying a pre-
mium, acquires the right, though not the obligation, to buy or sell a partic-
ular asset at a given price—the execution price—on a certain date or before
a future date, which is the expiration time. Options are negotiated in over
the counter (OTC) and in organized markets. These are the financial prod-
ucts that offer the best possibilities of coverage and speculation, and they
offer a high level of liquidity and low transaction costs.
241
242 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
For example, in the usual way, an investor who anticipates a rise in the
price of wheat could buy the wheat directly and store it, waiting to sell it
later to gain a profit if the price rises. Another way of benefiting from
the price rise without having to mess with storage would be to buy a call
option on the same amount of wheat for a three-month period. If three
months later the price has risen, it will be good for both the first investor
who bought directly and the one who bought the option. The difference
is that the first investor would have to pay in full for the wheat bought;
meanwhile, the option only requires the investor to pay a premium that
represents a very small percentage of the actual price. If the first investor
bought $500 worth of wheat, and the price increased to revalue his or her
investment to $700, he or she will have made a profit of $200, which
represents 40 percent of his or her initial investment. Conversely, the
second investor used a small capital represented by the premium, which
could be of $10, and realized a gain on the option of $200 (the difference
between the previous price and the risen price), so the return on his or her
investment would be of $190, that is, 1900 percent!
An important feature of options is that they are negotiable instruments
in the market, and it is not necessary to materialize the transaction physi-
cally; you can buy an option for $10 and then sell it on the market for $200
with a profit of $190 while never having had the intention of really buying
the asset.
Options are divided into calls and puts. A call is the right to buy a par-
ticular asset; you can buy a call (buy the rights) or sell a call (sell the
rights). The buyer of a call has the right, but not the obligation, to buy the
asset (underlying asset) at a certain price (execution price) on a certain
date or prior to that date, which is the expiration time, in exchange for a
premium that the investor pays to the seller of the call. A put is the right to
sell an asset. You can buy or sell a put (the right to buy or sell). The buyer
of a put has the right, but not the obligation, to buy the asset (the real asset)
at a certain price (execution price) on a certain date or prior to that date,
which is the expiration time, in exchange for a premium that the investor
pays to the seller of the put. The right to buy or sell is acquired by the
holder of the option. The person who sells the option is called the writer.
Underlying assets are the assets on which the option is negotiated. The
premium is the cost of the option, that is, the price that gives the right to buy
(call) or sell (put) the underlying asset of an option. In the preceding exam-
ple, the premium would be represented by the $10.
When the holder executes the right to buy or sell, it is said that he or she
executes the contract. The execution price, or strike price, is the price at
CHAPTER 14 SECRETS TO FOREX DIVERSIFICATION 243
which the right is granted to buy or sell (call or put) an option. The expiry
date is the date on which the option contract expires.
There are three basic types of options: the American option, which can
be executed at any moment until its expiry date; the European option,
which can only be executed at the moment of its expiration; and the Asian
option, whose price on the expiry date does not depend on the price of the
underlying asset at that moment but on the average of its consecutive prices
during a determined time period.
Options are commonly perceived as being a high-risk investment; how-
ever, this is not always true because certain positions in options bear much
less risk than physical acquisition of the underlying asset. You could say
that the maximum risk of option holders is the premium that has to be paid.
The maximum risk of the writers or sellers is usually unlimited, and their
maximum benefit is the option premium.
the potential risk is unlimited because the price could rise indefinitely. This
is why selling calls or puts is extremely risky if the investor does not have
the underlying asset in his or her possession.
LEVERAGE
One of the most attractive characteristics of futures and options, and at the
same time the most dangerous, is that they can be used as leverage effect.
The leverage effect is the relationship between the invested capital and the
result obtained from a given investment. The higher the leverage, the less
capital is needed to obtain a particular result.
For example, say that an investor buys one call on company ABC shares
with expiry in January 2009, paying a premium of $15 with an execution
price of $100 (expressed as “1 ABC January 100 call”). At the moment, the
shares of company ABC are quoted at $108. If on the expiry date the shares
are quoted at $120, the investor will execute his or her buying option and
will sell the shares on the market for $120. In this way, with an investment
of $15 (the premium paid), the investor has obtained a profit of $20; the
return he or she has gotten on the transaction is 133.33 percent. You can see
that the return on options is much higher.
However, the leverage works both ways. If on the expiry date the shares
of company ABC are quoted at $80, the investor would not execute his or
her buying option because although he or she still has the right to buy
shares at $100, he or she can buy them cheaper, at $80, in the market. In
this case, the investor would lose 100 percent of the investment, that is, the
$15 premium.
The leverage effect has to be treated with respect, and only experienced
investors should speculate with options and futures because it is very easy
to lose the whole investment and more.
To calculate the value of the premium of an option, the market usu-
ally employs the formula of Black and Scholes. Here is a simple example
on how it is calculated: You have a share quoted at $100, and you could
buy it in a year at $100. How much does this right cost? To answer this
question, let us suppose that at the end of the year, the price of the share
can only take one of two values: It either rises to $120 or it falls to $80.
Now, you want to build a portfolio by buying 50 shares and selling 100
calls. How much would that cost? You would have to pay 50 shares ⫻
$100 ⫽ $5000; however, you will not need to pay all that money because
for the options sold, you will receive $100 ⫻ the price of each option,
which is still unknown. What you know is that if at the end of the year the
shares rise in price, your option will be valued at $100 and if they fall in
CHAPTER 14 SECRETS TO FOREX DIVERSIFICATION 245
price, the option will have a value of 0. Thus the final value of your port-
folio will be $4000 if the share price rises (50 shares ⫻ $120 per share ⫺
100 calls ⫻ $20 per call) or $4000 if the share falls (50 shares ⫻ $80 ⫺
100 calls ⫻ $0 per call). You can see that the value of your portfolio does
not depend on the price of the share at that moment. That is, your portfo-
lio is not at risk and thus offers a return similar to one-year Treasury
bonds (the expiry date of the option).
If this nonrisk return is 5 percent, this implies that to get $4000 in a
year, you will have to invest today 4000/1.05 ⫽ $3809.52; this is your
portfolio’s initial value. Since the 50 shares you have bought cost $5000,
the amount you should have received on the 100 options you have sold
would be 5000 ⫺ 3809.52 ⫽ $1190.48. For this reason, the price of each
option at the moment of initiation should be $11.90. If the price of the
option were lower or higher than $11.90, you could earn money by buying
options and selling shares, or vice versa, which would bring the price to its
theoretical value.
The Black and Scholes model uses an infinite number of subperiods
and repeats the preceding procedure an infinite number of times to calcu-
late the price of the option. In the example, the theoretical value of the
option applying this formula is of $11.90, very near to the value calculated
for a single period.
Some of the strategies used with options allow a more aggressive
approach to the market:
Bull spread. Buying a call or a put with a particular execution price
and selling another call or put with a higher execution price,
where both options must have the same expiry date and a rise in
the price of the underlying asset is expected.
Bear spread. Buying a call or a put with a given execution price
and selling another call or put with a lower execution price
(as in the bull spread, both options have the same expiry date).
In this case, a decrease in the price of the underlying asset is
expected.
Straddle buy. Buying a call and a put with the same execution price
and expiry date. The expectation is for great volatility to the
bullish as well as to the bearish side.
Strangle buy. Buying a call and a put with different execution prices
and the same date of expiry. As with the straddle, the strangle
expects great volatility in the financial markets, even higher than
in the preceding case.
246 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
FOREX FUTURES
A future is a standardized contract to buy or sell a specific asset at a fixed
future date and at a price previously agreed on. There are two parties in
a futures contract: the buyer and the seller. The buyer of the future has the
obligation to buy on a determined date; meanwhile, the seller has the obli-
gation to sell on that same date.
Futures contracts are negotiated in organized markets and thus are
standardized instruments; for example, a futures contract on steel can
involve 5 tons of the metal, or each contract can be set for 1 million dollars.
For this reason, futures are only negotiated in multiples of contracts; that is,
if you want to buy 50 tons of steel, you would have to buy 10 steel futures.
These standards offer liquidity by increasing the number of potential buyers
and sellers.
One tick is the minimum fluctuation allowed in the price of a futures
contract. Since every futures contract has a fixed size, the minimum fluc-
tuation will have a monetary value, which is the tick multiplied by the size
of the contract; this is known as the tick value.
All kinds of people use futures; some of them, for example, farmers,
use them to reduce risks; others look for a high rentability while assuming
greater risks to achieve it. In the futures markets, the risk is transferred
from the most conservative to the most aggressive traders.
Risk reduction is achieved by taking a termed position in the opposite
direction of the real-time market’s actual direction, trying to protect the
investment against contrarian moves of the market. This is known as cover-
age. Arbitrage is achieved by buying or selling in two different markets
(actual market price/futures), benefiting from the imperfections in each
one of them. Speculators try to maximize their profits in the shortest time
possible, thus assuming a very high risk in their investments.
In general terms, the prices of futures move in the same direction as
the market of physical assets. The transaction in futures implies that both
parties agree to buy and sell financial instruments or physical commodi-
ties that will be delivered in the future at a specific price. When you buy
a futures contract, you agree to buy something that the seller has not yet
produced. Physical goods are usually not exchanged nor delivered, unlike
248 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
the transactions made between producers and consumers, but their prices
allow traders to hedge their risks or speculate. The futures market is very
risky and complex but also offers great liquidity.
Profits and losses are calculated on a daily basis. If the price of the
commodity or financial instrument rises, the seller’s account will be deb-
ited on the difference between the actual price and the value agreed on at
the moment of establishment of the contract; the buyer’s account will be
credited with the equivalent amount. The buyer has profited because the
price he or she is obligated to pay on the future is now less than the market
price. These adjustments are made every day as the market moves and
futures positions are settled. Thus gains and losses are deducted or credited
to each party’s account every day.
The futures market is a very important source of information about
sentiment in the market and other indicators. It is extremely active and is
the center of the global marketplace because transactions occur in the phys-
ical exchange of commodities and not only as pure financial speculation.
Prices can be determined through estimation of tomorrow’s levels of supply
and demand based on today’s transactions. Many factors intervene in the
definition of prices, and a constant flow of information renders the overall
operativity very transparent. On the other hand, risks are reduced because
the prices of the futures were set previously, which allows planning for the
quantities to be bought or sold. The result of a reduced risk is a higher sta-
bility in prices at the retail level because sellers will be less likely to push
prices too far to make up for their losses.
COMMODITIES
Commodities are all those goods that constitute the essential raw materials
of an economy and worldwide and represent an additional alternative of
investment for various investors’ profiles. Some of them are quite conve-
nient to acquire and add to a trader’s assets portfolio.
A commodity is any raw material that has gone through very little or
insignificant transformation. In international financial markets, commodi-
ties are classified into the following basic groups: metals (gold, silver,
copper), energy (oil, natural gas), food and supplies (sugar, cotton, cocoa,
coffee), grains (corn, wheat, chickpeas, beans), and livestock (pigs, cattle).
This definition allows us to find a relevant characteristic of these types
of goods. They are very homogeneous products, that is, very similar to each
other. Take, for example, a well-known commodity—gold. You all know
what gold is, what it is made of, and that its quality, if it is raw, should not
have much variation independent of its location. For this reason, its price
should not reflect any significant differences. This is so true that a single
price exists for commodities at an international level. For example, if you
see that today the price of gold is at $980 for 100 ounces, that would be the
price at which any buyer or seller would be transacting. Some small differ-
ences may stem from transactions costs, intermediaries, and transportation,
including insurance, but basically, the price would remain the same for
everyone.
The first question you should ask prior to including commodities in
your portfolio is if you think that a particular commodity is likely to rise
in price in the future. Maybe it would be a good idea to incorporate this
product into your trading portfolio because if you pay $5 today for a com-
modity and tomorrow its price is at $7.50, you will have made a 50 percent
return. This return is a capital gain. However, some commodities involve
heavy storage costs or even can be perishable, so it would be almost
CHAPTER 14 SECRETS TO FOREX DIVERSIFICATION 251
INDICES (SECURITIES)
An index is an abstract number that represents the joint movement of sev-
eral financial assets of which it is composed: stocks, bonds, currencies,
commodities, and others. An index is a statistical measure of change.
Applied to the financial markets, it would represent an imaginary portfolio
of securities relative to a particular market or a portion of it.
Each one of the assets has a relative weight inside the index that is
measured based on previously set parameters from before the index was
252 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
created. At the moment when there is a change in the price of the asset, the
index also will move, and its variation will be greater or lesser depending
on the relative weight of the asset that has changed.
The most well-known indices that you normally follow in the world-
wide market are the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the National Asso-
ciation of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations(NASDAQ), the Dow
Jones, the Standard and Poor’s 500, the Nikkei in Japan, the Financial
Times 100 (FTSE) in great Britain, the CAC 40 in France, and the Dax in
Germany, as well as assets such as bonds in the case of JP Morgan’s Emerg-
ing Markets Bond Index EMBI or the Commodity Research Bureau CRB
for commodities. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is one of the world’s
best-known indices and is the most commonly used point of reference for
the stock market, along with the Dow Jones.
You have already seen that the Dow Jones shows the joint evolution of
30 of the most representative companies on the market. The weight is usu-
ally determined by the volume of transactions, and the company that has
performed with a higher volume during the last 6 months will have a
greater influence on the index.
If a stock from one company represents a 10 percent weight of the
index and another represents 20 percent, it is obvious that if each has expe-
rienced in a given month a 1 percent variation, this will not influence the
index in the same proportion. This also explains why the index could be ris-
ing in a given period while several of the companies that compose it could
see a decline in the value of their stocks.
An index is also used as a comparative measure for investments. For
example, if an investor buys a particular stock, he or she can compare its
performance with the index to see if it is going over or under the average.
One of the characteristics of the indices is that because they are a series
of grouped assets, they represent an important diversification, and thus the
risks are lowered. Usually an index reflects less volatility than the individ-
ual assets that compose it. You couldn’t technically invest in an index
because it represents the whole sum of the companies included, but indices
traded through mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (EFTs) that are
based on indexes allow people to invest in securities that represent ample
market segments or even the complete market.
C H
15 A P T E R
MY FAVORITE WAYS
TO TRADE
BREAKOUTS
RANGE BREAKOUT
253
254 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
The range breakout setup is quite easy to spot. The markets have been
trading in a sideways or consolidation pattern and usually in a tight range.
I usually check the setup in a short time frame, such as the 5-minute chart,
and if I see one in a higher time frame, such as, for example, the 1-hour
chart, it most often will have an inside bar being formed.
There are two times during the trading day that I use to plan a range
breakout: the Asian session or pre-Europe/pre-London range and the pre-
U.S. session range. In the first case, I will place a horizontal line at the high
of the range and another at the low of the range that has formed between
03:00 Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and 07:00 GMT (the times on the
chart above are GMT ⫹2; this will depend on your own broker’s server
time). A few minutes before the time span ends, I place a straddle: two
pending stop orders, a buy stop 5 pips plus spread above the high of the
range and a sell stop at the low of the range. The stop loss of each position
is placed at the entry price of the opposite position; on EUR/USD pairs,
those ranges are usually 30 or 40 points on average. I place the stop loss at
breakeven plus 1 point as soon as the price has gone 20 pips in my direction
and delete the pending order that was not triggered. I keep on trailing the
stops using parabolic stop and reverse (SAR) as a reference.
In the second case, the range I use is the time span between 5 a.m.
Eastern Time (ET) and 8 a.m. ET, placing the straddle orders a few min-
utes before the U.S. market open. This strategy can be used any time a
tight consolidation range is being formed.
A variation of this strategy is splitting the position into three parts (this
would be three pending stop buy orders and three pending stop sell orders),
taking profit on one of the orders as soon as 20 points have been reached and
setting the stop loss to breakeven plus 1 point on the remaining two. Then I
take profits on the second position when it reaches 40 points, leaving the third
one with the above-mentioned trailing stops until it is finally stopped out.
Symmetric, ascending, and descending triangles also can be used for
this strategy because they are also consolidation periods. In the case of an
ascending or descending triangle, the breakout expectation usually will be
in the previous direction of the trend.
Ascending and descending triangles are formed of both a diagonal sup-
port or resistance and a horizontal support or resistance. The level to watch
for a directional breakout is the horizontal line. The ascending or descend-
ing triangle is a continuation pattern that usually will resume its direction
after the consolidation pause.
It is also important to check other levels that are present, such as pivots
and Fibonacci retracements, especially when deciding about the exact entry
price. It is preferable to set the entry a few points above or below such levels
CHAPTER 15 MY FAVORITE WAYS TO TRADE 255
TREND BREAKOUT
256 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
SUPPORT/RESISTANCE BREAKOUT
This strategy is similar to the range breakout but at a higher level and on
higher time frames. Looking at daily and weekly time frames, I identify
strong areas of support and resistance and set a pending order, buy and sell
stop, a few points above and below the resistance and support levels.
CHAPTER 15 MY FAVORITE WAYS TO TRADE 257
In the first figure, you can appreciate the weekly trendline, and a steeper
daily trendline that has formed. After such a strong up move, prices most
probably will turn back for a correction.
The parameters to use are the same as for a trend breakout: waiting for
the price action to effectively break, retest, and bounce from the trendline
with support or resistance changed into its opposite.
CHANNELING
Using price channels as a reference for swing trading is similar to trading
inside a range bound or sideways price action: You sell when prices are at
the high of the range and buy when prices are at the low of the range. The
only difference will be that, unlike the sideways market where the high
and low levels are mostly the same throughout the whole range, you will
have higher highs and lows in an uptrend and lower highs and lows in a
downtrend.
CHAPTER 15 MY FAVORITE WAYS TO TRADE 259
Depending on the time frame and style of trading, including risk man-
agement, that you decide to use, you can trade both sides of the swing or
only the directional side, that is, buying longs, or “buying on dips,” in an
uptrend and selling shorts, or “selling rallies,” in a down trend. If you trade
both sides, stop losses should be much tighter on countertrend positions.
ANDREW’S PITCHFORK
260 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
FIBONACCI CHANNELS
HEDGING
TRUE HEDGING
A hedge is an attempt to profit from the arbitrage of two or more correlated
currency pairs. Hedging has been erroneously related to opening a long and
short position on the same currency pair, but this leads nowhere because it
would end up as a neutral or zero-value position, and in addition, you
would lose the price of the respective spreads on top.
A true hedge is realized by using different currency pairs, usually in the
direction where the swap or overnight interest rate is positive for all or
almost all the currency pairs involved. The total amount earned on
overnight also will depend on each broker’s swap rates, but they are mostly
in the same range for a vast majority of firms.
Although negative correlation implies that when one pair is going up,
the other one is going down—thus if you are long on both, one of them will
end up as a losing position—there is always an arbitrage and difference in
the number of points that the price has increased in the profitable position
in relation to the points lost in the losing position.
PAIRS CORRELATIONS
A perfect hedge would imply a 100 percent inverse correlation between
opposite pairs involved. However, this is not possible, although there are
complementary currency pairs, such as EUR/USD and USD/CHF, that
have a very high correlation index, nearing 96 percent most of the time.
BASKET OF CURRENCIES
This is a hedge that attempts to obtain a positive carry interest in the over-
all positions, which are closed at a certain point when the total balance of
points is positive. You can use as many currency pairs as you want, but the
hedge usually performs much better with only the four majors: EUR/USD,
GBP/USD, USD/CHF, and USD/JPY.
Open a long position on all four currency pairs in the following pro-
portion (stated here in lots):
1 lot EUR/USD
1 lot GBP/USD
1.2 lots USD/CHF
0.9 lot USD/JPY
The proportion is relative to the difference in the pip values of the currency
pairs: $1 for EUR/USD and GBP/USD, $0.85 approximately for USD/CHF,
262 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
and $1.08 approximately for USD/JPY (the pip value for pairs with USD as
the quote currency do not vary, whereas there is a slight difference when
USD is the base currency).
This is a medium- to long-term strategy. At a certain point, the overall
basket of currencies will be showing a positive increase in equity, in addition
to the swap interest accumulated throughout several days. All positions are
closed at this time, and a new hedge is set up using the same parameters.
For this system, I use a break of the 50-period exponential moving average
(50 EMA) with early signal and confirmation given from relative strength
index (RSI) and moving average convergence-divergence (MACD) indica-
tors. I plot a 50-period EMA on the chart, plus an RSI indicator with stan-
dard settings (RSI 14) and a MACD indicator also with standard settings
(12, 26, and 9).
As you can see in the chart above, several early signals will alert you to
the possible change in direction: You first have the RSI crossing above the
overbought level, indicating that the current direction might be coming to
CHAPTER 15 MY FAVORITE WAYS TO TRADE 263
The 5/13 EMA cross is a very simple strategy that can be used for scalping
in smaller time frames, such as 1 or 5 minutes. I just plot a 5-period and a
13-period EMA on a chart and wait for a cross of both to happen. When the
5 EMA crosses upward above the 13 EMA, I open a long position at the
open of the next candle; when the 5 EMA crosses downward below the 13
EMA, I open a short position at the open of the next candle. This is a very
short-term strategy that has to be tightly monitored because changes on
those small time frames occur very fast.
264 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
TRADING GAPS
DAILY HIGH-LOW
This is a quite simple and almost “set and forget” type of medium- to long-
term trading strategy. It also uses a basket of currencies, which can range
from four to six optimally.
wider stops, but as an average, you could consider around 100 pips for a
moderate stop. This means that your position size has to be defined accord-
ingly. I personally use a fixed-percentage amount of the balance that repre-
sents a maximum risk of 2 percent per each pair based on a 100-pip stop
loss, which lowers the risk on pairs that will need much smaller stop levels.
Preparation of the trade and definition of the entry price: Draw a line
at the low and the high of the previous week and at the low and high of the
trading day that has just closed. Calculate the median line by adding both
high and low and dividing by 2. If the price is below the weekly and daily
median lines, be on the lookout for a long position; if the price is above
weekly and daily median lines, check if overall conditions can indicate a
short position. The entry will be mostly discretionary, but you usually can
assume that after a pronounced rise or decline there will be more chances
for a reversal or at least a good correction, so when prices are near the lows,
you should look for long opportunities, and the inverse applies when they
are nearing the highs: You would try to assess whether a short position has
a good possibility of success.
CHAPTER 15 MY FAVORITE WAYS TO TRADE 267
However, this is not a fixed, blind rule: You should check the overall
trend from weekly to H4 down, and if there is a strong trend in develop-
ment, you should stick with the overall trend. I place the market orders
as soon as the new trading day begins, based in my trading plan and
because this should be an ideal trading system for traders who do not have
much time to sit and monitor the charts. However, depending on the posi-
tions of the prices with regard to the weekly and daily lows and highs and
eventuality of pullbacks or corrections inside a given trend, a more pre-
cisely priced limit order could be set, allowing stops to be much tighter.
In general, though, an average 100 pips distance is mostly what you will
encounter.
Stop-loss price: the high of the previous day plus 10 pips for a short
position; the low of the previous day minus 10 pips for a long position.
Should the weekly high or low be very near the daily extremes, stops would
have to be set at plus or minus 10 pips from those prices.
The trades usually can last for a week or more if a good trend is going
on. This strategy, however, is not suited to sideways markets. It is definitely
a trend-following system. The risk-reward ratio, if the system is followed to
the letter with discipline and letting the market close your positions by
itself instead of exiting earlier than needed, is higher than 1:3 or even than
1:4. The percentage of winning positions might be lower than 50 percent,
though, but the winners could ride up to 600 or 700 points; meanwhile, the
losing positions will not be more than 100 or 120 pips each.
Exit prices and daily adjustments: Every day at the same exact time,
you check your positions and adjust the stop losses to the preceding daily
high or low accordingly. If any of the pairs has been stopped out, reentry on
that pair is done only and exclusively at 5 p.m. ET based on the preceding
entry criteria. You keep on adjusting the stops every day as the market
keeps moving in your direction, and the positions will be closed only and
exclusively when they are finally stopped out by the market.
An addition to this system would be to include a new position in the
same direction as the trend under the same rules as soon as the stop of the
previous one is in the positive zone so that you can maintain the same risk-
reward ratio and benefit from one or more free trades as the trend evolves.
This would be considered position trading longer term. For example, when
your previous position for the USD/JPY pair has its stops set at ⫹20 at the
moment of the daily adjustment, and only after determining the good prob-
ability of continuation of the current trend, you open a new position of
USD/JPY, setting the corresponding stop loss at a 10-pip distance from the
preceding day’s high or low.
268 FOREX TRADING SECRETS
The figures above present an example with short and long entry lev-
els on EUR/USD and USD/JPY. This is a quite simple and stress-free
strategy that can yield handsome profits over time if you employ patience
and discipline.
CONCLUSION
An Endless Quest for the Holy Grail
I have been teaching and trading the FOREX market for nine years. It has
really been available to retail traders such as ourselves for only about
11 years. In addition, I have been a stock broker for more than 16 years. The
one thing I always like to point out when I am talking to my many students
is that there is no “Holy Grail” of trading. I often run into traders who think
that they can buy FOREX trading software and use it like an ATM
machine—just put in a pin number, and out pops the cash. It just doesn’t
work that way.
This is a real market. It is the largest financial market in the world, and
you have to treat it as such. You can trade this market part time, or you can
do it every day. In fact, you can make it your business—the business of
trading.
The real “Holy Grail,” if any, is inside—your brain, in conjunction with
your psychological awareness and control and the cumulative experience
and knowledge you have acquired and the alignment of your goals and your
actions in harmony and perfection through a good amount of practice, then
again practice, and then again more practice until knowledge transforms
into intuitive wisdom.
Trading can be learned, of course, but the experience can’t be transmit-
ted. It has to be constructed by every individual through a personal effort of
understanding and hard work. It will not happen overnight. Trading needs a
269
270 CONCLUSION
In the FOREX and in life as well, this will be very useful to you. Keep it
simple and straight (KISS)!
Learn to move on after losses. Don’t dwell on missed trades or missed
pips after you decide to close. There will be hundreds of opportunities in
the future. Follow your plan, and follow your system. Practice every day,
and experience will come with time, patience, and discipline. Don’t look
outside for what’s already inside. Leave your ego behind; be humble and
smart. You can’t decide where the market will go, so learn to see where it
wants to lead you, not the other way around. Exit bad trades, and hold onto
good trades. Set yourself a goal, and stop trading when you have reached it.
Be realistic about your annual percentage growth. Do not force yourself
into overproduction. Don’t open the doors to greed. Each FOREX trade is
a new one with new conditions and perspectives. Do not dwell in the past.
Choose the currency pairs that have proven to be profitable. Leave behind
those you can’t understand.
Finally, take a deep look inside yourself: There it is indeed—your own
and personal “Holy Grail.” The rest is history yet to be written, assuredly
the history of your own path to the greatest of successes!
Keep checking www.JamesDicks.com for important FOREX informa-
tion. We have FOREX conferences, and I personally hope to meet you soon.
Happy investing!
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A P P E N D I X
38 STEPS TO BECOMING
A TRADER
BY ANONYMOUS TRADER
[As published in Commodity Futures Trading Club News and in Traders
Organization’s “Real Success Day Trading Course”]
1. We accumulate information—buying books, going to seminars, and
researching.
2. We begin to trade with our “new” knowledge.
3. We consistently “donate” and then realize that we may need more
knowledge or information.
4. We accumulate more information.
5. We switch the commodities we are currently following.
6. We go back into the market and trade with our “updated” knowledge.
7. We get “beat up” again and begin to lose some of our confidence.
Fear starts setting in.
8. We start to listen to “outside news” and to other traders.
9. We go back into the market and continue to “donate.”
10. We switch commodities again.
11. We search for more information.
12. We go back into the market and start to see a little progress.
273
274 APPENDIX
CANDLESTICK PATTERNS
BULLISH REVERSAL PATTERNS
High Reliability
Medium Reliability
Low Reliability
Medium Reliability
Low Reliability
Medium Reliability
Low Reliability
Medium Reliability
Low Reliability
Ask (ask price, ask rate) The price at which a currency pair or security
is offered for sale; the quoted price at which an investor can buy a currency
pair. This is also known as the offer, ask price, and ask rate.
Appreciation
An increase in value of an asset.
Arbitrage Profiting from differences in the price of a single currency
pair that is traded on more than one market.
Asset An item having commercial or exchange value.
Bank rate The percentage rate at which the central bank of a country
lends money to the country’s commercial banks.
Base currency In FOREX trading, currencies are quoted in terms of a
currency pair. The first currency in the pair is the base currency. The base
currency is the currency against which exchange rates generally are quoted
in a given country. Examples: In USD/JPY, the U.S. dollar is the base cur-
rency; in EUR/USD, the euro is the base currency.
Bear market An extended period of general price decline in an individual
security, an asset, or a market.
Bid The price at which an investor can place an order to buy a currency
pair; the quoted price where an investor can sell a currency pair. This is also
known as the bid price and bid rate.
Bid/ask spread The point difference between the bid and offer (ask) price.
289
290 GLOSSARY
Bretton Woods The site of a conference that in 1944 led to the establish-
ment of the postwar foreign exchange system that remained intact until the
early 1970s. The conference resulted in formation of the International
Monetary Fund. The system fixed currencies in a fixed exchange-rate sys-
tem with 1 percent fluctuations of the currency to gold or the dollar.
Broker An agent who executes orders to buy and sell currencies and
related instruments either for a commission or on a spread. Brokers are
agents working on commission and not principals or agents acting on their
own account. In the FOREX market, brokers tend to act as intermediaries
between banks, bringing buyers and sellers together for a commission paid
by the initiator or by both parties. There are four or five major global brokers
operating through subsidiaries, affiliates, and partners in many countries.
Bull market A market that is on a consistent upward trend.
Buy limit order An order to execute a transaction at a specified price
(the limit) or lower.
Broker One of the market participants that acts as an intermediary
between retail traders and larger commercial institutions.
Buy on margin The process of buying a currency pair where a client pays
cash for part of the overall value of the position. The word margin refers to
the portion the investor puts up rather than the portion that is borrowed.
Cable FOREX traders’ slang word that describes the British pound/U.S.
dollar exchange rate (GBP/USD).
Candlestick chart A chart that displays the daily trading price range
(open, high, low, and close). A form of Japanese charting that has become
popular in the West. A narrow line (shadow) shows the day’s price range. A
wider body marks the area between the open and the close. If the close is
above the open, the body is white (not filled); if the close is below the open,
the body is black (filled).
Carry (interest-rate carry) The income or cost associated with keeping
a foreign exchange position overnight. This is derived when the currency
pairs in the position have different interest rates for the same period of time.
Carry trade In the FOREX, holding a position with a positive overnight
interest return in hope of gaining profits without closing the position just
for the central bank’s interest-rate difference.
Central bank A bank, administered by a national government, that reg-
ulates the behavior of financial institutions within its borders and carries
out monetary policy.
GLOSSARY 291
Dealer An individual or firm that buys and sells assets from its portfolio,
acting as a principal or counterpart to a transaction.
Depreciation A fall in the value of a currency owing to market forces.
Desk Term referring to a group dealing with a specific currency or
currencies.
Devaluation The act by a government to reduce the external value of its
currency.
Discretionary account An account in which a customer permits a trading
institution to act on the customer’s behalf in buying and selling currency
pairs. The institution has discretion as to the choice of currency pairs, prices,
and timing, subject to any limitations specified in the agreement.
Expert advisor (EA) An automated script that is used by the trading
platform software to manage positions and orders automatically without
(or with little) manual control.
ECB (See European central bank.)
ECN broker A type of FOREX brokerage firm that provides its clients
direct access to other FOREX market participants. ECN brokers don’t dis-
courage scalping, don’t trade against the client, don’t charge spread (low
spread is defined by current market prices), but charge commissions for
every order.
Economic release (economic news release) A scheduled announcement
related to a particular fundamental indicator that includes the data of the
previous release and the forecast value. At the moment of the release, revi-
sions can be made to the previous release values, and these also count on
the actual release.
Euro The single currency of the European Economic and Monetary
Union (EMU), introduced in January 1999. This is the amalgamation of the
following currencies (after January 1, 2002, these currencies have been con-
sidered legacy currencies): German Deutsche marks, Italian lira, Austrian
schilling, French franc, Belgium franc, Netherlands (Dutch) guilders, Finish
markka, Portugese escudo, Greek drachma, Irish punt, Luxembourg franc,
and Spanish peseta.
European central bank (ECB) The central bank for the new European
Monetary Union. The main regulatory body of the European Union finan-
cial system.
Execution The process of completing an order or deal.
GLOSSARY 293
because value dates for spot transactions change to the next new value date
at that time.
Market maker A person or firm that provides liquidity, making two-
sided prices (bids and offers) in the market.
Market order A customer order for immediate execution at the best
price available when the order reaches the marketplace.
Market rate The current quote of a currency pair.
Maturity The date on which payment of a financial obligation is due.
Momentum The tendency of a currency pair to continue movement in a
single direction.
OCO order One cancels the other order. A combination of two orders in
which the execution of either one automatically cancels the other.
Offer The price at which a currency pair or security is for sale; the
quoted price at which an investor can buy a currency pair. This is also
known as the ask, ask price, and ask rate.
Open order Buy or sell order that remains in force until executed or can-
celed by the customer.
Open position Any position (long or short) that is subject to market fluc-
tuations and has not been closed out by a corresponding opposite transaction.
Order A customer’s instructions to buy or sell currencies at a certain rate.
Overbought (See Overbought/Oversold Indicator.)
Overbought/Oversold indicator A technical analysis tool that attempts
to define when prices have moved too far and fast in either direction. This
is usually calculated based on a moving average of the difference between
the number of advancing and declining issues over a certain period of time.
If the market is considered overbought, the technical analyst will sell, and
if the market is considered oversold, he or she will buy.
Overnight position Trader’s long or short position in a currency at the
end of a trading day.
Oversold (See Overbought/Oversold Indicator.)
Pip The smallest increment of change in a foreign currency price, either
up or down. The last digit in the rate (e.g., for EUR/USD, 1 point ⫽ 0.0001).
Pipette Fractional pip, 1/10 of a point. Additional decimal point quoted
by some FOREX brokers, which provide a greater accuracy as to price
movements. Examples: 1.27503 for EUR/USD or 110.052 for USD/JPY.
296 GLOSSARY
Selling short A situation where a currency has been sold with the intent
of buying back the position at a lower price to make a profit.
Settled (closed) position Closed positions for which all needed transac-
tions have been made.
Settlement The actual delivery of currencies made on the maturity date
of a trade.
Short position (or short) In foreign exchange, when a currency pair is
sold, the position is said to be short. It is understood that the primary currency
in the pair is “short,” and the secondary currency is “long.”
Short squeeze The pressure on short sellers to cover their positions as a
result of sharp price increases.
Slippage Execution of order for a price different from expected (ordered).
Main reasons for slippage are a fast-moving market, low liquidity, and low
broker’s ability to execute orders at a certain moment.
Spot market Market where people buy and sell actual financial instru-
ments (currencies) for two-day delivery.
Spot price The current market price of a currency that normally settles in
two business days (one day for U.S. dollar and Canadian dollar).
Spread This point or pip difference between the bid and ask price of a
currency pair.
Square (See Flat (square).)
Sterling Another term for the British currency, the British pound.
Stop (loss) order Order to buy or sell when a given price is reached or
passed to liquidate part or all of an existing position.
Stop order (or stop) An order to buy or to sell a currency when the cur-
rency’s price reaches or passes a specified level.
Support Price level for which intensive buying can lead to the price
decreasing (downtrend).
Support levels A price at which a currency or the currency market will
receive considerable buying pressure.
Swap A transaction that moves the maturity date of an open position to a
future date.
Take-profit order A customer’s instructions to buy or sell a currency
pair that, when executed, will result in the reduction in the size of the exist-
ing position and show a profit on said position.
298 GLOSSARY
RESEARCH MATERIALS
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299
300 BIBLIOGRAPHY
301
302 INDEX
Bad trades, 105–108 Box size (point and figure charts), 160
Balance of payments indicators, Brain, neural networks in, 235
127–128 Brainstorming groups, 118–119
Bank of Japan, 137–139 Brazilian real (BRL), 19
Banks, 49, 75, 124, 140–142 Breakaway pattern:
Bar charts, 155f, 156, 160–161, 161f bearish, 284f
BARR pattern (see Bump-and-run bullish, 279f
reversal pattern) Breakeven price, 63
Base currencies, xiv, 22 Breakeven stops, 107
“Basket of currencies” hedge, Breakouts, 215, 221, 231, 253–258
261–262 “Breathing,” 31, 72
Bat patterns, 210–211, 211f British pound (GBP), 13–14
Bear spread strategy, 245 Broken trends, 216
Bear traps, 173 Brokers, 38–47
Bearish deliberation pattern, 284f features of, 41–45
Bearish divergence, 178, 179f in FOREX market, 4–5, 7, 50
Bearish markets, 158, 170, 182, 182f regulation, reputation and size of,
Bearish outside bars (BEOBs), 151 39–40
Bearish reversal patterns, 281f–284f, types of, 41–42, 45–47
286f Bulkowski, Thomas, 192
Bearish trends, phases of, 127 Bull spread strategy, 245
Bears power, 169–170 Bull traps, 173
Beliefs, 98, 113–114 Bullish divergence, 178, 178f
Belt hold pattern: Bullish markets, 158, 170, 182, 182f
bearish, 284f Bullish outside bars (BUOBs), 151
bullish, 279f Bullish reversal patterns, 276f–279f,
BEOBs (bearish outside bars), 151 281f
Bid price, 21 Bullish trends, phases of, 126–127
Bid-ask spreads, 76–77, 81–82 Bulls power, 169–170, 169f
Bids, 21 Bump-and-run reversal (BARR)
Binary contracts for difference pattern, 191, 192f
(CFDs), 17 Business inventories, as economic
Black and Scholes formula, 244–245 indicator, 132
Black candlestick pattern: Butterfly patterns, 209, 209f
bearish long black candlestick, 286f Butterfly strategy, for options, 246
neutral, 288f “Buy low; sell high.”, 221
neutral short black candlestick, 288f “Buy the rumor; sell the fact.” in news
Bodies (of candlesticks), 182–183 trading, 144, 145
Bollinger, John, 164 Buying opportunities, in Heiken-Ashi
Bollinger bands, 164–166, 165f charts, 158
INDEX 303
H I
Hammer pattern: IBs (introducing brokers), 41–42
bullish, 279f Ichimoku kinko hyo, 176–177, 177f
bullish inverted, 279f If done (IFD) orders, 29, 257
Hanging man pattern, bearish, 284f IMF (International Monetary Fund),
Harami pattern: 19
bearish, 284f Imports, 142
bearish cross, 283f Impulsive moves, 153, 154
bullish, 279f In neck pattern, bearish, 285f
bullish cross, 278f Income, personal, 137
Harmonic price patterns, 208–213 Index(—ices), 251–252
bearish, 209–211, 209f–212f Index of the Industrial Sector, 16
bullish, 209–211, 209f–212f Index of the Transportation Sector, 16
HDI (human development index), 142 Indicator(s):
Head-and-shoulders (H&S) pattern, contrarian, 145–146
187–189, 187f, 188f fractals as, 214
Hedges and hedging, 24, 40, and price action, 150–151
261–262 stock market as, 8–9
Heiken-Ashi charts, 157–158, 157f stop and reverse, 32
HHs (see Higher highs) of support and resistance,
Hidden divergence, 177 (See also 219–220
Reverse divergence) U.S. economic, 127–137
High value (Heiken-Ashi charts), 158 (See also Technical indicators)
INDEX 309
P Position(s), 22
PAL (premiere advisor language), 45 and account size, 73
Panic phase, in bearish trend, 127 closing of, 24
Paper (demo) trading, 38, 77–80, 234 entering, 62, 64, 66, 221,
Papert, S. A., 235 266–267
Parabolic stop and reverse (PSAR), exiting, 62, 64, 66, 106–108,
167–168, 167f 221, 267
Patience, 72 flat, 22
Payment currencies, xiv long, 21–23, 170
PB patterns (see Pin bar patterns) managing of, 23
People’s Bank of China, 18 open, 21–23
Perceptrons (M. L. Minsky and scaling out of, 73, 91
S. A. Papert), 235 short, 21
Performance, 67, 71, 72 sizes of, 62
Personal income, as economic splitting of, 222, 254
indicator, 137 (See also Orders)
Personality (of traders), 61 Position trading, 52–53
Phase of accumulation, in bullish Positive directional indicator (⫹DI),
trend, 126 164
Phase of discouragement, in bearish Positive emotions, 99–100
trend, 127 Power failures, 86–87
Phase of distribution, in bearish trend, PPI (producer price index), 133
127 Prejudices, 108
Phase of distribution or speculation, in Premiere advisor language (PAL), 45
bullish trend, 127 Premiums (options), 242, 244–245
Phase of panic, in bearish trend, 127 Preparations for trading, 37–58
Phase of tendency or fundamental, in choosing brokers, 38–47
bullish trend, 127 defining players in FOREX,
Piercing line pattern, bullish, 276f 49–50
Pin bar (PB) patterns, 151, 151f selecting a trading strategy, 50–54
Pinocchio patterns, 151 tools for trading, 47–49
Pip range bar (candlestick) charts, and trader’s levels of development,
160–161, 161f 55–58
Pip value, 84 trading accounts, 37–38
Pips (points), 24–27, 72, 92, 144–145 Price(s):
Pivot points, 222–226, 223f, 224f, actual, 84, 222
225t, 260 ask, 21
Point and figure charts, 160, 160f bid, 21
Points, 24 (See also Pips) breakeven, 63
Political instability, 86 execution (strike), 241–243
INDEX 313