I began my quest this week attempting to merge what looked like a promising “swing for the fences” style of trading with my tried and true guerilla trading techniques. As a result, I started myself out in a -$13.00 hole when I was supposed to be up $5.50 as of day three.
But it was not all for naught. This morning I finally got all my settings calibrated just right, thanks in large part to a proprietary indicator I’ve labeled as my “Trigger Line.” They say there is no holy grail in trading, so I guess I will just have to think of it as my Deuteronomy 8:18(a) indicator. My “swing for the fences charts” also helped me settle on what I’m calling the “TRUE” Intraday Trend Line—another key component in getting everything calibrated correctly. Thanks to these (and other supplemental) chart graphics, I am now down only -$7.78 after making ten trades using this final version of my system (I made four additional trades while typing this entry).
There are still several hours left to trade, so I might even be able to reduce my loss to $0.00 before the day is over. At any rate, it looks like a 3% daily return (or more) instead of just 1.8% is quite realistic, in which case, my $100 opening balance should multiply much more quickly.
Make no mistake however, this more than likely final method I have adopted is still a guerilla trading approach to buying and selling foreign currency pairs, compiling pips a handful at a time. There is no escaping or denying the fact that exchange rates are constantly zigzagging up and down—and if one is able to capitalize on this reality, it only makes sense to do so. And because of the accuracy of the intraday trend line, instead of getting stopped out when swinging for the fences because of a reversal in the intraday trend, my flexible bias (thanks to the agility of guerilla trading) changes right along with the market’s sentiment.
Also, instead of avoiding trading on Friday (as I used to do) because the rates have a way of continuing to head in the same direction for abnormal and bizarre lengths of time, the indicators pictured above keep me closely attuned to the markets.
Using the system is very simple. If the TRUE Intraday Trend Line is sloping upwards, I enter a long position when price drops below the lower Trigger Line and set my stop loss at 0.1% (?) below the Trigger Line. I take profit when price rises above the upper Trigger Line. If the TRUE Intraday Trend Line is sloping downwards, I simply do the opposite.
Trading in this manner essentially means my targets are always hit without my ever being stopped out of any trades, though today I simply set my take-profit targets five pips beyond my entry levels. (I’ve yet to actually see what happens when trading exactly as described in the previous paragraph, but it will probably a little less than double how much I make from each trade.)
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