Forex Trading Tips: A System For Success

By Boris Schlossberg • March 20th, 2010
Boris Schlossberg

A System For Success

Last week I wrote, “Each day I attempt to ask and answer only two questions –What’s Happening? And How Will It Affect Price? Get that answer right and you’ll be on your way to being a successful short term trader.”

That’s only partially true.

Short term trading is never only about analytics. It is also about systemic risk control. Your analytics can change from day to day, moment to moment. In fact flexibility and open mindedness are the key attributes of all skillful short term traders. However when it comes to risk control your system must be well thought out and rigid as a column of steel. You can experiment all you want with your trading setups, but deviate from your risk control rules and you will always pay a heavy price. It doesn’t matter if you run a 500 dollar retail FX account or 5 Billion dollar hedge fund like LTCM. Ignore the rules and the market will smite you.

--------------Top 5 Stories in FX This Week----------------
Full-steam Ahead
The World's Strangest Financial Instrument
The Accounting Trick That Inflated the Bubble
The Coming Rebound in Private Credit Demand
Why ETFs Are Better

Although everyone has a different tolerance for risk, here are my day to day rules.

1. Leverage


In trading there are two ways to generate leverage. You can use high margin or you can have a high turnover. I prefer the later. I don’t trade with more than 10:1 margin and generally keep my ratio to 5:1. That means that for every $10,000 in my account I will not hold more than a 100,000 unit position at any given time. My goal is not to “press the pedal to the metal” on every trade but rather to make money one pip at time. My plan is take many trades throughout the day and average 20 pips/day or 100 pips/week. If I can do that consistently that means I am generating $25,000 of profit per year for every $10,000 of capital at risk. That would be pretty damn good.

2. Stops


I trade with fixed stops of 20 pips – regardless of whether I am trading yen, pound or any other pair. I know this ignores the whole issue of volatility but I don’t care. It simplifies my trading enormously. I trade with fixed stops of 20 and fixed take profits of 20. During a typical day when I am busy with a million things this system has saved my hide more than once. I NEVER WIDEN MY STOPS, but I may bust out of the trade early if I don’t believe it has the power to reach my target. Over a long period of time and after doing thousands trades I learned that 20 points is the perfect amount of risk for me. If I get stopped at -20 it’s because I am dead wrong in my analytics or my timing.

3. Position sizing


Again I opt for simplicity. I generally open with 1 unit (so if I had 20K in my account my opening trade would always be 100,000 units) but if I am extremely confident in the trade I will double my bet and trade with two units from the start. That’s the maximum position sizing I allow myself. I never add to a losing position but I will double my bet to two units if I get stopped out and I am confident that the trade should work and I was just early. If I get stopped on 2 units I step back and bring my size back to one because I am clearly wrong on the trade.

4. Day Limits


Generally I never reach them, but if I am down 5% on my equity (-$500 on 10K account) I stop trading for the day. There are a million factors that could be responsible for such a drawdown but the single most important action at that time is not to try to figure them out, or to try to get the money back, but to simply STOP TRADING. This is the most common reason why most short term traders blow up their account. When it come s to trading the Hippocratic oath is a pretty good rule to follow – “first, do no harm”.

Comments

Boris: what do you think of the software program of global tec of 4xmade easy now taken over by mb trading. what brokers do you use and system . thanks. steve

 

Leave a Comment

« Video Interview: Favorite Trade and Comments on Data | Home | What Japan Post’s New Deposit Limit Means for JPY »

Scalping Session Based Breakout

July 24, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

VIDEO TOURSBK Forex Advisor Video

A Video Tour of BK Website

Come join us on detailed tour of our website

Boris's Scalping Strategy to Capture 10 Pips Per Day

Watch high probability day trading in action

see our BK Forex Advisor YouTube Channel
Forex Trading Strategies - Make A Bet Not A Trade

July 30, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Forex Trading Strategies - No Reservations

July 24, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Forex Trading Strategies - Science and Art of Trading

July 16, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Forex Trading Strategies: Scalping Supreme

July 10, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

Forex Trading Strategies: Head Versus Heart

July 10, 2010 • by: Boris Schlossberg

see all posts by Boris Schlossberg
What are Forex Month End Fixings?

July 30, 2010 • by: Kathy Lien

Euro: Looking for an Upside Breakout

July 26, 2010 • by: Kathy Lien

BNN Interview on Euro

July 20, 2010 • by: Kathy Lien

Bernanke’s Plan Z

July 20, 2010 • by: Kathy Lien

How Much Will the Stress Tests Help the Euro?

July 19, 2010 • by: Kathy Lien

see all posts by Kathy Lien
bk-for-testemonials

* Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Forex (and Futures) trading involves high risks, with the potential for substantial losses, and is not suitable for all persons. These testimonials may not be representative of the experiences of other customersand are no guarantee of future performances or successes.

Kathy Lien and Boris Schlossberg are employed as Co-Heads of Global Research for Global Forex Trading, a division of Global Futures & Forex, Ltd. (GFT). However, the BKForexAdvisors.com web site is maintained by BKForex Advisor, which is a company owned and operated by Kathy and Boris separately and independently from their employment with GFT. GFT does not control the content of the BKTraderFX.com and BKForexAdvisors.com web site, and opinions expressed by Boris and Kathy on the BKForexAdvisors.com web site are not necessarily the opinions of GFT.

copyright notice | terms of service | terms of use | website policy