Quote from NZDSPeCIALISt:
I had this realisation at the start of this year, to take trades from the high timeframes and when it was in the zone to move in with the scalping tools that I had with tight stops, and then to give the trade some time to develop.
Easier said than done. Our minds are somehow programmed to want action. Believe me it is tempting to take profits on the table and walk.
As an example, I remember exactly a month ago I got in long on a Euro trade just before that ECB interest rate hike, I swore to myself I would hold of for 100 pips. I got out at +55...the market came back to within like 15 pips of my breakeven and I thought I was smart. Guess what, the next day it shot back up again (NFP) and I would have hit my predecided target. I missed that move by the way. I could have turned of my computer on that ECB thursday (after putting stop to breakeven) gone for a holiday for 3 days and I would have been AHEAD come Monday morning.
Point is that to swing it is easy but hard in other ways. It looks easy and it is but that ingrained daytrading habit always wants to assert itself.
Nothing wrong in what you did ... you banked a pofit.
Why did you not re enter after the price failed to penetrate your entry price.
Is it because you dont have a signal for this action or is it because your mind closes to a trade after you exit.
