Forex Trading Tips - Forget Everything I Said

By Boris Schlossberg • February 19th, 2010
Boris Schlossberg

Forget Everything I Said

Last Thursday I put out an article entitled “EUR/USD at 1.3500 – Just a Matter of Time?” It was written before the Fed Funds rate hike announcement so it was far from a foregone conclusion. The article spurred a flurry of responses with some readers agreeing with me and but most calling me a idiot who clearly didn’t understand how grossly oversold the unit was.

One particular gentleman took the trouble to point out all the factual mistakes I made (from improperly labeling the yearly low for the unit to not recognizing the fact that the euro r had made a higher low on daily basis for the first time since January which was clearly a bullish sign). His arguments were compelling and to an objective eye he may have been more accurate in his analysis.

Later that day of course, the Fed sprung its surprise Fed rate hike on the market and all hell broke loose. The euro dropped like a stone hitting 1.3500 within ten minutes of the news. That same gentleman then posted only one line to the thread - “Forget everything I said.”

--------------Top 5 Stories in FX This Week----------------
As Greece Burns, Hazards Remain in the U.S.
Greece or California: Who'd you Rather be?
Wall Street's Bailout Hustle
Fed Chooses to Exit Through Eye of Needle
Europe's Slowdown Would Only Nick US

When I saw that comment I couldn’t help but smile because I thought it captured perfectly the nature of trading. No matter how many years you’ve traded, no matter how much price action you’ve seen, you always come across a “Forget everything I’ve said” moment. Markets like life will never fail to surprise you. If they didn’t, trading would be as easy and predictable as a government job and just about as rewarding.

Alas I wish there was an easy antidote to those moments of crazy volatility but there is not. The only remedy is experience. You have to blow up a few times before you learn to control your emotions. Jack Schwagers book is littered with examples of world class traders blowing out their accounts repeatedly before finally mastering that lesson.

However, having a contingency plan for your trading much like companies have for their business at least helps you to be aware of the problem. Next time a “Forget everything I said” moment hits you – ask yourself do I really want to trade this event? Or should I step away to come back and fight another day?

 

Leave a Comment

« Forex Trading Strategy: Reality Versus Theory | Home | Burger King: Perfect Example of Current Inflation Pressures »

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