Many FOREX traders take shopping more seriously than fx trading. Few people would spend £500 without carefully researching and examining a
product. But many traders take positions that cost them well over £500 based on little more than a hunch.
This cannot be stressed enough. Most traders fail because they lack discipline. Be sure that you have a plan in place before you start to
trade. Your analysis should include the potential downside as well as the expected upside. So for every position you take, you should place
both a Limit Order and a Stop/Loss Order.
Set Smart FOREX Trade Limits
For each FOREX trade, choose a profit target that will let you make good money on the position without being unachievable. Choose a loss
limit that is large enough to accommodate normal market fluctuations, but smaller than your profit target. Lock these in using Limit Orders
and Stop/Loss Orders.
This simple concept is one of the most difficult to follow. Many traders abandon their predetermined plans on a whim, closing winning
positions before their profit targets are reached because they grow nervous that the market will turn against them. But those same traders
will hang on to losing positions well past their loss limits, hoping to somehow recover their losses.
Sometimes FOREX traders see their loss limits hit a few times, only to see the market go back in their favor once they are out. This can
lead to mistaken belief that this will always keep happening, and that loss limits are counterproductive. Nothing could be further from the
truth! Stop/Loss Orders are there to limit your losses.
No trader makes money on every trade. If you can get 5 trades out of 10 to be profitable, then you are doing well. How then do you make
money with only half of your positions being winners? By setting smart trade limits. When you lose less on your losers than you make on your
winners, you are profitable.
Don't Marry Your FOREX Trades
People are emotional. It is easy to do objective analysis before taking a position. It is much harder when you've got money invested.
Traders holding positions tend to analyze the market differently in the hope that it will move in a favorable direction, ignoring changing
factors that may have turned against their original analysis. This is especially true when losses are being taken on a position. Traders tend
to "marry" a losing position, disregarding signs that point towards continued losses.
Don't Bet the Farm
Do not over trade. A common mistake made by new FOREX traders is over-leveraging an account. Just because one lot (100,000 units) of
currency only requires £1000 as a minimum margin deposit, it does not mean that a trader with £5000 in his account should be able to trade 5
lots. One lot is £100,000 and should be treated as a £100,000 investment and not the £1000 put up as margin. Most traders analyze the charts
correctly and place sensible trades, yet they tend to over leverage themselves. As a consequence of this, they are often forced to exit a
position at the wrong time. A good rule of thumb is to trade with 1-10 leverage or never use more than 10% of your account at any given time.
Trading currencies is not easy (if it were, everyone would be a millionaire!).