FXjake's Free Pips

hi fxjake, like your style.

you have large stop... on the other side you get out usually on a small retracement. How do you decide to give trade room all the way to stop or to get out early?

my method:
I like using my emotions that I learned to observe, to play opposite direction to what they are screaming for, with very small stop and it works great. Except, it feels like work.

:mad:
 
Quote from Pachoo:

Great, thanks Jake. I am just getting into Forex and have been amazed by your results in this thread. :)


Thanks Pachoo. It took years to get consistent results, and much of that, I believe is simply managing yourself.

Maybe I see it that way because I am (or "was") a psychologist, but it seems to me that understanding your weaknesses and working on them is the key to getting on track to profitability.
 
Quote from austrijec:

hi fxjake, like your style.

you have large stop... on the other side you get out usually on a small retracement. How do you decide to give trade room all the way to stop or to get out early?

my method:
I like using my emotions that I learned to observe, to play opposite direction to what they are screaming for, with very small stop and it works great. Except, it feels like work.

:mad:

This is a great question, Austrijec.

The details are key to profitability, as I see it.

It's funny, I think that entries really aren't that critical, but the exits sure are.... and I am not alone in that thinking.

A great example of this is the recent trade I took on the 4hr NZDUSD chart (attached).

[I know I didn't post this one on this forum, I forgot.....it happened rather quickly.]


I thought that price would bounce off of the "major" s/r zone (black line) and approach the minor s/r zone (purple shaded area), but the question remained, would price then retreat back down, or would it go higher?

At this point the trade was a "free trade" and a few pips were locked in, but I had made the decision that it looked like the minor support/resistance area (purple) would not hold, and that price would come down and knock me out at breakeven, so I exited.

Will you always get it right?

Nope.

But I have found that psychologically, it is easier to have two targets - an easy-to-achieve target that is close, one of the nearest minor support/resistance zones and a more aggressive target. Once the first target is met the remaining lots will me moved to breakeven (or + a few pips) and then I see if I can get more out of these.

Sometimes when it is clear that a reversal is coming - it is ok to just jump out straight away.

I have been thinking about this a lot and I think that there are ways to "develop" your intuition. Cognitive psychologists would call this "expertise" - but it is sort of the same thing, as I see it.

I have a lot of other thoughts on this, but I think I will use them to write an article on this issue, thanks for the inspiration austrijec.
 

Attachments

Just entered a long on the USDCAD

stop at 1.0809

will watch the 1.1100 level as that is the first minor s/r zone, but I think this could be a good one.
 

Attachments

Quote from FXjake:

Just entered a long on the USDCAD

stop at 1.0809

will watch the 1.1100 level as that is the first minor s/r zone, but I think this could be a good one.

Stop is below the daily low at 1.0780 - I had the wrong stop on the previous post
 
Quote from FXjake:

Stop is below the daily low at 1.0780 - I had the wrong stop on the previous post

May have double bottomed here, this could end up going up for a few days now, who knows...... this is why I stick the stop under the nearest low, in case of a double bottom.
 

Attachments

Quote from FXjake:

Stop at 1.0709
Sold at 1.0662

Take profit at 1.0605
2nd profit lower, maybe 1.0570 or lower....

This went over 20 pips rather quickly in the expected direction (down), and then it reversed rather quickly so I exited at 1.0685 for a -13 pip loss.

This is going up, like the USDCAD is going up tonight, I think.
 
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