Quote from traderNik:
Hi roberk
I have never traded spot forex; I have traded currency futures.
1)Ummm... I am not 100% sure what you're saying here. What was your stop on the trade? How much of your capital do you risk in each trade before you definitively pull the plug? If you are saying that you added to the position because you were sure the market would turn and that you had it planned that way all along... well, that's great. Congratulations on that trade.
2)Again, I'm unsure about what you are saying here. Is it that you can let positions 'breathe' more trading small spot forex positions? Maybe you're saying it's easier to leg into positions in spot forex if you don't have a huge trading account? If so, that may be great for a certain of style of trading. I personally leg into positions too, but my stops are worked out before I enter the first leg, so my opinions after the first leg goes on don't really matter. It wouldn't matter to me what my 'outlook' was - my outlook would have been reflected in the position I put on in the first place. I very rarely if ever add to losing positions. Instead I get out and wait for the market to provide me with fresh evidence that my initial judgement was correct. I've read about lots of guys who average down, though, including some heavyweights.
I don't scalp anything, ever. I treat futures as you do spot forex. In currency futures I have never traded the NZD, only the CDN and EUR and GBP. And yes, I've been filled away from my stop in a fast moving market. It is a new idea to me that bad fills in fast moving spot forex markets are, for structural reasons, less likely to consume xx% of your equity-at-risk than a commensurate position in a fast moving futures market. I would be very interested in knowing if this is the case, because it could affect my trading decisions.
[/B]