How do I trade Forex?

Yes as trader will hardwork eventually and trying to make good perform to start with goal to minimize the risk and increasing profit in trading although sometime loss occured

Hard, dedication, and commitment is the key to success in the market. Do this well and we are good to go.
 
There are many strategies involved in Forex Trading to become successful. But we need to understand that each strategy wouldn't work each time.

True. One can't use a scalping strategy for long-term trading and vice versa. Do people even try that?
 
There are many strategies involved in Forex Trading to become successful. But we need to understand that each strategy wouldn't work each time.
Yes I think so too, sometime I am trying averaging strategy and indeed not always end with good result and sometime fail, trend market that easy to changes sometime that causing strategy fail
 
One can't use a scalping strategy for long-term trading and vice versa. Do people even try that?


I do. I use "strategies for long-term trading" for what many people would "scalping" (I'm not actually a scalper, but you might reasonably call it "semi-scalping"). And they work very well. ;)

It's easy to assume that because the methods used for trade-entry signals on longer time-frames are more reliable (which they generally are) that it follows that longer time-frames are also necessarily going to be more profitable, but this is a mistaken assumption.

Reliability ("win-rate", if you like) and overall profitability are two different criteria.

Sometimes the far greater frequency/availability of trading opportunities on faster time-frames more than compensates for the reduced reliability.

I'm "just saying" ...
 
I do. I use "strategies for long-term trading" for what many people would "scalping" (I'm not actually a scalper, but you might reasonably call it "semi-scalping"). And they work very well. ;)

It's easy to assume that because the methods used for trade-entry signals on longer time-frames are more reliable (which they generally are) that it follows that longer time-frames are also necessarily going to be more profitable, but this is a mistaken assumption.

Reliability ("win-rate", if you like) and overall profitability are two different criteria.

Sometimes the far greater frequency/availability of trading opportunities on faster time-frames more than compensates for the reduced reliability.

I'm "just saying" ...


As long as your strategy works and is profitable nothing else matters. :thumbsup:
 
I have three account and trying with long term plan trading for two account and one account trying with short term plan trading, and work only when having spare time which often on london overlaping to newyork session, just trying
 
I do. I use "strategies for long-term trading" for what many people would "scalping" (I'm not actually a scalper, but you might reasonably call it "semi-scalping"). And they work very well. ;)

It's easy to assume that because the methods used for trade-entry signals on longer time-frames are more reliable (which they generally are) that it follows that longer time-frames are also necessarily going to be more profitable, but this is a mistaken assumption.

Reliability ("win-rate", if you like) and overall profitability are two different criteria.

Sometimes the far greater frequency/availability of trading opportunities on faster time-frames more than compensates for the reduced reliability.

I'm "just saying" ...


With same degree of risk applied (leverage) long-term timeframe trading is really more profitable, simply because of lower spread costs. I have raw spread account with Hotforex where I also scalp and fixed spread account for long term trading and I find that spreads costs still account for at least 20% of my profit. So I'm looking to switch completely to the long-term trading as less sitting before monitor is among other benefits from it.
 
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