Quote from smallStops:
don't worry, no way I will be changing the way I approach trading. Paid my due for that. There is always this question in the back of my mind : what is it about spreading that I could not get? May be I don't want to die a complete idiot. lol.
Don't feel silly at all. I get asked this quite often.
When most people approach spreading they think it's complicated, and that you're prone to two markets hurting you going up or down, and that there's greater risk. Also they don't know what they're looking for... why should I get in or get out? What do you do when you're in a spread?
// As a very basic measure, what I simply do is I chart an ATR of the spread, and I basically just go through the chart for the past 1 to 3 months and just observe how far can it go. This research pays off, and it's just for confidence purposes whilst averaging etc.
// So when you have some sort of range for how far it can go and what a big versus small session is, you try to capture maybe 10 to 20% of an average session as profit.
The truth is that I spread for three key reasons:
1. I cannot outright pick direction. But I can plot a chart, look at a spread, and fade a spike. When the time comes for world sentiment to change over the next 10 minutes or 3 hours, I am betting that the expensive product sold would be weaker than the cheaper product I'm long.
2. When you enter the spread, it's best to make sure at the start that you're entering both simultaneously. You are trading the spread, not outright. Get filled on a bid in one, and hit market in the other.
3. Watch the price action and the language that both products speak with each other. There's no immediate 'stop out' point, so get ready to collect more parcels at a certain region. Once you are filled in the spread, you're just quoting one market or the other by placing bids or offers (whichever side you want to get filled) for your profit target which is a distance. As one leg moves, you adjust the profit target again.
And that's it. This allows you to spread through data figures, over longer periods through-out the session etc. and carries less risk.
Now that you've seen technicals, it's a good thing to trade it for a few months, and eventually you will be able to discuss 'fundamentals' with other people who trade the same product. What this will help you with, is encourage you to either 'go with the spike' sometimes, or simply not step infront of a train when there's interest-rate sensitive or fundamental data related activity going on. When you're happy with the distance its deviated, you can get in and try to scalp around.
By the way, when you get filled for your profit on one leg, you just exit the other for bid or at market. No legging risk. That's true spreading.
People sometimes try to complicate it at the start, but it's not worth it unless you have years of experience. What I mean is, they will start buying and averaging 1-leg only, and then after 30 minutes or so if it's still offside they start averaging into the 2nd leg. This is wild and has many flaws, but is one common strategy of what people do when they get into a mess.
I advise simply just trading a spread, entering and exiting together!