Thank you note, I'm glad I could be of help for you.
Again, I want to stress out that your entry ideas and the SL settings are very good. I do this almost the same way. So you did learn the most important part already!
What you should concentrate on now are the "soft factors".
- Check out the higher timeframes (D1, H1, M15, M5) - where's the trend, s/r, patterns? What is likely to happen? The one thing that helps me most is to play through different scenarios before I trade (is there a reason for the price to rise, fall - why, how would it look like in the charts). And then REACT to the plan. Limit orders are a great way to do that.
And take your profits! I feel you want to let your trades run. That is good, but for that you MUST enter the trade very early in the direction of the trend. Everything other (like the two trades I gave you feedback on) should have a pre-planned target.
- How much time do you have for trading? When can you trade? Can you use a tablet for trading at work? IF only three hours a day, is daytrading really a good idea? Must it be EUR/USD for daytrading? It is tough and 1 pip spread is not a little, either.
Personally, I'm a lot more succesful at swing trading US stocks. There are hundreds of approaches towards trading and if you fail at daytrading EUR/USD don't give up and try out something other instead! Choose the one you like best and follow it.
And please don't take other people's comments so seriously! If it is of help for you, take it as a good advice, if not, forget it.
