Your
Forex Trading Style:
The Spider Or The Cat Approach?
Forex
trading is a very individual activity and each trader has a particular
Forex trading style depending on their personality type.
Being able
to objectively analyze our own trading style is a great asset. We can
then develop our style into a more consistent trading method by identifying
positive and negative characteristics. The following analogy from the
natural world is a tool we can use for self-analysis.
The Cat
Versus the Spider
What's the
difference?
Cat's
Chase Their Prey
Cats by
instinct chase their prey. They may stalk for a while and then pounce
and chase, following their prey.
Applied
to the foreign exchange markets, this type of Forex trading style involves
watching for a price breakout or a substantial move in one direction
and then joining it, effectively chasing the market.
Some traders
like to have this confirmation that price is definitely moving in a
particular direction before joining the momentum.
Spider's
Net Their Prey
A spider
on the other hand spins a web and patiently waits for the prey to come
to them. The unsuspecting fly gets caught in the net and the spider
gets a meal.
This analogy,
as applied to a Forex trading style, exemplifies the trader who carefully
examines price action in relation to previous support and resistance
levels and anticipates where price is going to stall.
This trader
now places an entry order at the strategic level and waits for price
to come to them. When it does and fails to break through, instead retracing
or bouncing, the trader gets paid!
Advantages
Of The Spider Forex Trading Style
While many
traders are successful in going with the momentum there are decided
advantages to the spider method.
Entering
a trade once price has already moved in a certain direction by 20 or
30 pips exposes one to the risk of a retracement. A bigger stop is
necessary to cover the possibility that price may go back 20 or 30
pips to retest a previous line of support or resistance.
Also, price
may abruptly stop just after we enter a trade moving rapidly in one
direction and then retrace taking out the stop for a loss.
On the other
hand, after carefully assessing major lines of support and resistance
by looking at the higher time frames and seeing where price highs and
lows have been over the last few days, we can predict where price is
likely to stall or retrace.
Using Fibonacci
calculations along with pivot points we can sometimes see 2 or 3 layers
of support and resistance. If price has already moved a substantial
number of pips during the trading session, it is likely to stall at
a key support resistance level. Entering a trade at this point means
we can set a smaller stop and we are nearer to getting our profit.
On the other
hand, price may have moved a substantial number of pips, perhaps 30
or 40 in one direction, and is now retracing. By looking at the previous
high or low, and by using Fibonacci, especially the 50% retracement
level, we can predict how far price is likely to retrace before continuing
in the direction of the trend.
Submitting
an entry order to get into the market at that key retracement level
often means we can set the stop just 20 to 25 pips away, beyond the
price swing or high for safety, and collect a good profit of 25-40
pips at the Fibonacci 127% extension level.
The One
That Gets Away
Of course,
the spider will sometimes see a powerful fly go straight through the
web and knock a hole in it! That's the one that got away.
The spider
Forex trading style will sometimes see price go straight through a
strong support or resistance level and not hesitate at all. Again,
that's the one that got away!
However,
more often than not, price will react at key support and resistance
levels. By adopting a patient waiting attitude, allowing price to come
to you rather than chasing it, a safer trading approach can be developed,
one that can contribute to consistent substantial profits in the long
run.
Once you
have identified your personal Forex trading style, see if there are
lessons you can learn and adjustments you can make using the cat and
spider analogy. Try to develop the habit of netting your profits as
opposed to chasing them!
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