Additional related content resides on the book's companion website
at www.thesensibleguidetoforex.com. This
website provides:
- Updates and
additional content.
- Much clearer
versions of the charts, in color and with much better resolution.
- Trade simulation
exercises to practice what you've learned with the option for interactive
feedback.
- More in-depth
information on a variety of topics found in the book.
- A continual
stream of articles on ideas for trades or investments for currency
diversified income.
Go to www.thesensibleguidetoforex.com. The
breadth and depth of the site's content will expand over time. We hope the site
becomes a must-read for those seeking currency diversification, either as
traders or investors seeking capital gains and/or income denominated in a
variety of currencies.
Notes
https://www.forexfactory.com/
Most Traders Fail within Their First Two Years
While I'm trashing
get-rich-quick illusions, here's a helping of fear to keep you motivated and
paying attention. In case you forgot (or skipped) what I wrote in the Read This
First section earlier, here's a little fact I've never seen acknowledged in any
forex book, though it's a well-worn topic of forex trader forums on such major
forex content websites like ForexFactory.com.9
The fact is this: Per available data, the odds are firmly against
you. Most forex traders lose money and are gone within a matter of months.10
U.S.11 regulators have reported that the vast majority (around 80
percent or more) of forex traders fail within their first two years. Few manage
to last at day trading in general.12 At least one large publicly traded forex brokerage reports
that 70 percent of its traders are unprofitable, close enough to provide
additional confirmation.13
Many take a rather simplistic view that because most traders fail,
forex trading should be avoided altogether by amateur traders or investors. By
that same reasoning, one should avoid real estate and insurance sales and any
other field that offers low barriers to entry, is potentially lucrative, and
attracts intense competition from which only a minority prosper.
Consider that one cannot even begin to practice in most lucrative,
skilled professions without years of professional training, typically costing
over $100,000 in tuition, related expenses, and lost wages. After that, there's
a demanding battery of exams, followed by years of relatively low-paying jobs
with grueling hours, commuting, office politics, and ass kissing thrown in as
you learn how the job is done.
Even after passing through all those hoops, only a minority will
make the big money. From my own experience working in large accounting firms,
I'd be surprised if 10 percent of the new hires out of college eventually
become partners or find equally lucrative roles in the field.
Having worked with traders for years in various capacities as
fellow trader and chief analyst tasked with advising clients, it's clear that most
traders don't do the preparation needed to have even a chance to succeed. The
small minority that attempt a serious program of study and practice have the
huge additional obstacle of needing to somehow figure out how to design their
own training program to duplicate the theoretical, practical, and mentoring
aspects of other professional training programs. What sources to study? Which
skills to learn in which order? What websites or forums to browse? What trading
styles to start with?
Here is the good news:
- The failure rates are inflated by all those casual
gamblers who were never serious traders.
- That you're reading this book puts you in a different
category of trader altogether. You're doing the right preparation as you
would for any profit-making endeavor, and you're going to get sound,
conservative advice. If you heed my lessons, the losses you incur as part
of your learning will be well within your means, and if you've the ability
and discipline, you'll be on the road to real success.
Even if in the end forex trading isn't for you, you'll have
learned valuable ways to profit from forex as a long-term investor.
In sum, I can't guarantee you success, but I can make you better,
and put you miles ahead of the rest of the unprepared suckers.
1. Neil Woodburn, “50 Year Anniversary of
Europe on $5 a Day (Man, How Things Have Changed!)” (May 2007), www.gadling.com/2007/05/02/50-year-anniversary-of-europe-on-5-a-day-man-how-things-have/.
2. A personification of the Japanese
housewife speculators, who are strong enough to affect international markets,
especially foreign exchange markets.
3. Vikas Baja and Graham Bowley, “S.E.C.
Temporarily Blocks Short Sales of Financial Stocks,” New York Times (September,
2008), www.nytimes.com/2008/09/20/business/20sec.html.
4. In an attempt to halt a run on their
banking stocks, Spain, France Italy and Belgium banned short selling them.
Their plunge began because as holders of large quantities of Greek bonds they
were now being asked to take “voluntary” losses on these as part of the latest
failed Greek rescue plan. Markets understood that this set a precedent for
similar partial defaults and losses on other sovereign bonds of weak EU
nations, which these banks also held in quantity. While wealthy and
sophisticated traders and institutions could find other ways to profit from the
strong downtrend in these shares, most private traders were now unable to
exploit this move.
5. As was the case with holders of insurance
against Greek default in July 2011, regulators ruled that “voluntary”
acceptance of 21 percent losses by banks holding sovereign Greek bonds did not
constitute default, even when it was obvious that these banks did so under
official EU threats that the banks would otherwise receive nothing and spark a
global crisis.
6. Just do an online search using terms like
“online forex brokers reviews.” You'll find plenty of sources. The more
reliable ones tend to be from established, professional looking websites that
obviously have a stake in protecting their reputation and offer their own
in-house reviews. Dailyforex.com runs its own in-house professional broker
reviews, which are usually more credible than those posted by unknown
volunteers in trader forums, because Dailyforex.com's reputation is on the line. Obviously, apply
the “smell test.” If you see nothing but positive reports on a site with broker
reviews, and the site carries ads from those same brokers, seek second and
third opinions. There are also online forums, though you've no assurance on the
reliability of the contributor. They may be accurate, or just disgruntled
losers blaming brokers for their own mistakes.
7. Javier E. David, “Global Forex Turnover
Continues to Increase,” Wall Street Journal (July 2011), http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111903999904576468211853284114.html.
8. David Woo is head of Global Rates and
Currencies Research for Bank of America, Stephen Jen is a former star forex
trader at Morgan Stanley, BlueGold hedge fund, and at last report runs his own
hedge fund, SLJ Macro Partners.
10. Joshua M. Brown, “Inside the Currency
Boiler Rooms” (April 2011), www.thereformedbroker.com/2011/04/09/inside-the-currency-boiler-rooms/ and Michael Greenberg, “U.S. Forex Brokers
Account Profitability Comparison” (October 2010), http://forexmagnates.com/us-forex-brokers-account-profitability-comparison/.
11. Brown, “Inside the Currency Boiler Rooms.”
12. For example, “…in the year 2000 state
regulators in Massachusetts subpoenaed records which showed that after 6 months
only 16 percent of day traders (in equities) made money.…Brilliant day traders
do exist.…Sadly, it's a very small handful.” Quoted from one of the better
trading books I've read: Come Into My Trading Room: A Complete Guide to
Trading, by Dr. Alexander Elder (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2002),
100–101.
Notes
1. Michael
Buek, “Why Index Funds Beat Active Strategies” (October 2009), www.bankrate.com/finance/financial-literacy/why-index-funds-beat-active-strategies-1.aspx.
2. James
E. McWhinney, Investopedia, “Massive Hedge Fund Failures” (July 2011), http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Massive-Hedge-Fund-investopedia-712989148.html?x=0&.v=1.
- Understanding
the basics of candle charts and the simple goals and theory behind all
those complex looking lines, charts, patterns, and more.
CANDLES, WICK, body lenght
Here's the key to
understanding the relationship between wick (or shadow) and body length and the
meaning of an individual candle: The longer the wicks are relative to the body,
the greater the indecision and the greater the back and forth struggle between
buyers and sellers, and the more likely the current trend will cease or
reverse. Conversely, the shorter the wicks are relative to the body, the more
decisive the move up or down, and the more likely that the move will continue
in the same direction.