Hello everyone,
I want to shake things up today to promote some discussion. Let’s change the way we think about Forex (if only just for a second). I’m gonna drop some bombshells. Here goes nothing…
[B]1) 99.9% of Technical Indicators are USELESS [/B]
Technical indicators will lose you money in the long run. Why is that so, you ask? Because technical indicators can only plot the past, and can never tell you the future. The price action influences the technical indicators - never the other way around. By the time a trade sets up according to your indicator, you’ve already missed the big movement. The only reason your indicators showed a valid entry is because the price already moved in one direction or the other. Indicators lag behind price. Indicators show you the signals too late. Trading based on indicators means you’ll always be one step behind. You’ll be forever jumping into the market too late.
Want a concrete example? By the time your moving averages cross, you’ve already missed out on the action (which is what causes them to cross in the first place). How much you’ll miss out on depends on the time frame you’re trading, but it could be anywhere from a few pips to a few hundred pips. In other words, you’ll be too late to make any real money on the trade.
I said 99.9% of technical indicators are useless. The only one worth using is the 200 EMA. This moving average will point out trends, support and resistance points, and give you clues to the price action. You should ditch all other technical indicators.
[B]2) Money management is PRIORITY #1 of any system[/B]
Money management, done right, can turn even the worst systems into profitable ones. You need to establish your S/L and T/P rules before entering any trade. Your money management should only allow you to risk a certain percentage of your capital with each trade (e.g., 2-3%).
Furthermore, the exit point is more important than the entry point. You need to know exactly when you are going to exit the trade, whether it goes in your favor or turns against you. The system must have a good risk / reward ratio (R:R ratio). How many losses would it take to wipe out one good trade? If you use a 1:3 ratio, then 3 losing trades in a row will cancel out 1 good trade (e.g., an average S/L of 50 pips and T/P of 150 pips).
Your money management should be based on how many trades you expect to win (e.g., 60%) and how many pips on average you aim to win (e.g., 100 pips). Then, just factor in the amount you are willing to lose per trade (e.g., 2% of your account), and go from there to determine all the parameters. This is not an easy thing to do, but the time invested will be worth it. I recommend working it all out mathematically before trading and sticking to it.
[B]3) Learn to trade based on PRICE ACTION[/B]
Is the market trending or ranging today? Will the pair find support at its new price or will it encounter resistance? Are there any price patterns on the chart? What does the 200 EMA tell us?
These are the elements of trading you need to master. You have to identify the market conditions (e.g., trending, ranging, breakout, whatever) based on previous price action and the 200 EMA. You’ll find that the price bounces around off the 200 EMA. In an upward trend, it will bounce of the moving average and continue upward. Other times, it will reach its peak and descend downward toward the moving average. Other times, it will stay within a range for a few days before deciding what to do.
Price action does not lag. Price action is raw trading based on pattern identification and being able to identify market conditions. Learning to trade this way is worth the effort. People talk about “the market changing over time”. Trading with price action never changes. The principles always remain.
In short, you need to become a chart expert. Look at the past price action based on the 200 EMA. Find patterns in how the price will find levels of support and resistance (e.g., Fibonnaci retracements).
[B]4) Never trade below the 4H chart.[/B]
You need to identify the big picture, and trade accordingly. The smaller time frames will just lose you money, especially when you factor in the costs to place the trade. The daily time frame is preferred when trading price action. Get in early, and ride out the profits.
[B]5) Do NOT trust backtest results based on an indicator[/B]
It’s an illusion to see the price going exactly the way your indicator would have predicted and to get excited over backtest results. For instance, look up any moving average system and you’ll see that the price follows nicely in sync with the moving averages.
The same could be said for many other systems. The problem is that the indicators are still lagging behind the price action. They are not predicting anything. The price will move in a certain direction, and your indicators are basically just telling you that: “Yep, the price moved either up or down”. It’s impossible to tell what the price will do based on indicators.
In any moving average system, for instance, the lines may cross but then immediately uncross. Or they may become intertwined. Or they may cross and then cross in the other direction. Yet, when you look at it through a backtest, it’s easy to say that “The moving averages were messy and I wouldn’t have taken this trade”. But in the exact moment, you may have taken it. It’s impossible to know because initially the trade looked appealing. This is the danger of indicators. They suggest one thing, but can be entirely incorrect. They can only plot the past price movements, when it’s too late and when it’s easy to have hindsight bias.
And YES, these criticisms apply to ALL indicators, including MINE that I’ve recommended in other systems.
[B]RECAP[/B]
Give up on technical indicators. They’re a lost cause. Just look at all the ‘holy grail’ systems out there based on technical indicators. They’re a dime a dozen. But they can never predict the future price action.
Work on money management and practice trading price action. The exit is more important than the entry - remember that.
Study the charts and look for patterns. Try to trade just based on the 200 EMA on the daily time frame (use a simulator to practice). You’ll be surprised.