How many kinds of
main strategies are there in FOREX trading?
There may be dozens of
strategies in Forex trading. Let’s just talk about the roots.
What is Nature Of Market?
What is Fundamental Trading?
What is Hedge?
What is Arbitrage?
What is Carry Trading?
What is Martingale?
What is Anti-Martingale?
What is Grid?
What is Day Trading?
What is Scalping?
What is Break-Out Trading?
What is Pivot?
What is News Trading?
What is Trend Following?
Nature Of
Market:
Every thing in the universe has its
NATURE. So is Forex market. So is every currencies pair in this market. For example, GBP/JPY
always moves faster, and its wave range is longer than other pairs, such as a hundred pips
during a day or even a hour. EUR/GBP generally waves narrowly several pips only within a day.
For American, EUR/USD and GBP/USD like to sleep in day and dance at night. AUD/USD and NZD/USD
look like twin, they commonly act in the same style, if one of they goes north, another one does
not like to go south. But EUR/USD and USD/CHF are doomed to be enemy, while one of them flies up
like a hydrogen balloon, the counterpart mostly will drop like a lead ball. And so on, so on.
Once we find this kind of "Nature of
Market", we can develop and figure out some strategies for particular currency pairs, just
follow their nature, predict their moving direction and range. Then we will get our own trading
strategy and system.
Fundamental Trading:
In Forex market, many
professional analysts like to use a kind of method to predict the future. It is so-called
“Fundamental Analysis”. Based on this method, they develop many kinds of strategies to trade
Forex. These are strategies of forecasting the future price movements of currencies based on
economic, political, environmental and other relevant factors and statistics that will affect
the basic supply and demand of whatever underlies the foreign currencies.
If you like to try
Fundamental Trading, you need learn and understand a lot of finance knowledge. Actually, not
only finance knowledge, you need to be interested at many things of this world, including
politics, economy, geography, culture, diplomacy, even military affairs. And you need to study
the core underlying elements that influence the economy of a particular entity. For example,
when the USA’s GDP or employment report is strong, you begin to get a fairly clear picture: the
general health of America’s economy is good. So the US dollar should be stronger than other
currencies. But how far can the US dollar go? Fundamental Trading may not answer this question
very accurately. You may need to come up with other precise tools as to how best to translate
this information into entry and exit points for a particular trading strategy.
Hedge:
In finance, a hedge is an
investment that is taken out specifically to reduce the risk in another investment. Hedging is a
strategy designed to minimize exposure to an unwanted business risk, while still allowing the
business to profit from an investment activity.
In FOREX,
there are two kinds of similar "hedging" strategies:
1, Buy and
Sell the same currencies pair, same lots, same timing. Then let it go. While one of those orders
goes north, the counterpart will go south. After the winner takes profit, we can wait for the
loser turning around. In a yo-yo market, this method works well.
For example,
buy 2 lots GBP/USD at 2.0003, at the same time sell 2 lots GBP/USD at 1.9997. While the rate
rises up to 2.0053, we close the buy order and take profit 50 pips. Now, the sell order will
draw down around 50 pips. Let’s wait for the rate falling down, it will fall down usually,
especially in yo-yo market environment. If the rate drops down to 2.0037, close the sell order,
the sell order will lose 40 pips. Does it hurt? No. Don’t forget the 50 pips we have taken at
the buy order. Totally, we can get 50-40=10 pips. Furthermore, if the rate keeps falling, let’s
say down to 2.0027, we can take 50-30=20 pips, etc.
Some people would doubt
it... doesn't this "strategy" sound like hedging flat for nothing, just paying double spread?
Why bother? Well, they are right, because we forgot mentioning the key point: timing of closing
orders. When to close the winning order to set a foundation and when to close the losing order
to lock the profit, there are some tricks inside. Experienced traders use technical analysis
skills to decide this vital timing. Believe it or not, those experienced traders say that this
method helps them screening false signals out.
This kind of
"Yo-Yo Hedge" can work at any currencies pair.
2, Buy (or
sell) unequal lots of special currency pairs and buy unequal quantities of another kinds of
currency pairs which usually move in the opposite direction. This seems a "Semi-Hedge" trading
strategy. It is created based on “Correlation” between some particular currency pairs. So it
is not suitable for every currencies pair.
Actually,
this kind of hedge has another feature: earning SWAP! You earn interest daily on the held
position which can yield up to 50% per year of your full account balance.
There are several pairs
can do it. Such as EUR/USD Vs. USD /CHF, GBP/USD Vs. USD/CHF, AUD/USD Vs. NZD/USD, EUR/JPY Vs.
CHF/JPY, GBP/JPY Vs. CHF/JPY.
Let's take the EUR/USD and
the CHF/USD pairs.
These pairs are
historically negatively correlative 93-98% of the time. That is
when one pair goes up the other goes down, and vice versa, up to 98% of the time. In a high
leverage account (as high as 400:1 or 500:1), you could earn 50% SWAP interest in a year. How?
Let's say you have $5,000 in your account and a 10% risk margin set. If the net interest we
receive is 1.25% annually, this 1.25% interest will be enlarged to 50% per annum, by the 400:1
leverage.
And, this return does not
include the buy low/sell high profits.
But, if the base of this
kind of hedge collapses, it means the “Correlation” does not exist any more, for example the
“Correlation” drops under 50% or lower, there will be a disaster.
Arbitrage:
Some people call
“Arbitrage” as a risk free strategy. But other people call it as a trick which looks
like the cat pawing chestnuts from a fire. But in theory, its risk is minimum in deed. We
introduce three types of arbitrage strategies here:
1,
Triangle Arbitrage:
Searching for two highly
fast-moving pairs (like EUR/USD and USD/JPY), the price of a not-so-fast moving pair like EURJPY
should always be derived by multiplying (or dividing, etc) the fast-moving pairs. So for
example, if EUR/USD is 1.4871 and USD/JPY is 108.24, the logical price of EUR/JPY should be 1.2
x 120 = 160.96. But at the same time, the real EUR/JPY rate is 160.90. The slower moving pair
lags behind the logical price, then profit opportunity comes.
In practice currencies are
quoted with a bid ask spread, so a trader should be careful that he is actually buying at the
quoted ask price, and selling at the quoted bid price. Other transaction costs, such as
commissions, might also invalidate the apparent free lunch.
More pairs:
AUD/CAD CAD/JPY AUD/JPY
AUD/CAD GBP/CAD GBP/AUD
AUD/CAD USD/CAD AUD/USD
AUD/CHF CHF/JPY AUD/JPY
AUD/CHF GBP/CHF GBP/AUD
AUD/CHF USD/CHF AUD/USD
AUD/JPY EUR/JPY EUR/AUD
AUD/JPY GBP/JPY GBP/AUD
AUD/JPY USD/JPY AUD/USD
AUD/USD GBP/USD GBP/AUD
AUD/USD USD/CAD AUD/CAD
AUD/USD USD/CHF AUD/CHF
AUD/USD USD/JPY AUD/JPY
CAD/JPY EUR/JPY EUR/CAD
CAD/JPY GBP/JPY GBP/CAD
CAD/JPY USD/JPY USD/CAD
CHF/JPY EUR/JPY EUR/CHF
CHF/JPY GBP/JPY GBP/CHF
EUR/AUD AUD/CHF EUR/CHF |
|
EUR/AUD AUD/JPY EUR/JPY
EUR/AUD AUD/USD EUR/USD
EUR/AUD GBP/AUD EUR/GBP
EUR/CAD AUD/CAD EUR/AUD
EUR/CAD GBP/CAD EUR/CAD
EUR/CAD USD/CAD EUR/USD
EUR/CHF AUD/CHF EUR/AUD
EUR/CHF GBP/CHF EUR/GBP
EUR/CHF USD/CHF EUR/USD
EUR/GBP GBP/AUD EUR/AUD
EUR/GBP GBP/CAD EUR/CAD
EUR/GBP GBP/CHF EUR/CHF
EUR/GBP GBP/JPY EUR/JPY
EUR/GBP GBP/USD EUR/USD
EUR/JPY GBP/JPY EUR/GBP
EUR/JPY USD/JPY EUR/USD
EUR/USD GBP/USD EUR/GBP
EUR/USD USD/JPY EUR/JPY
GBP/JPY USD/JPY GBP/USD |
2, Hedging Arbitrage:
This technique is the
safest ever, and the most profitable of all hedging techniques while keeping minimal risks. This
technique uses the arbitrage of roll over interest rates (SWAP) between two brokers.
One broker which pays or
charges roll over interest at end of day, and the other should not charge or pay this kind of
roll over SWAP interest. The main idea about this type of Hedge Arbitrage is to open a position
of currency (Fore example, the highest SWAP GBP/JPY) at a broker which will pay you a high
interest for every night the position is carried, and to open a reverse of that position for the
same currency with the broker that does not charge interest for carrying the trade. This way you
will gain the interest or SWAP that is credited to your account, risk-free.
3, Netting Arbitrage:
The main idea behind the
strategy is, using differences between cross rates (such as EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and EUR/GBP) at
different markets.
For example, suppose you had opened the
following positions:
buy 1 lot EUR/USD at 1.4867;
sell 1 lot EUR/GBP at 0.7600;
and sell 0.76 lot GBP/USD at 1.9566.
The netting/clearing gives
the following results:
Long EUR from the first pair and short EUR from the second pair gives zero exposure in EUR.
Long position in GBP from the second pair and short position from the third pair gives zero
exposure in GBP.
Short position from the first pair ($148,670.00) in USD and long position from the third pair
($195,860.00*0.76) in USD gives you $183.60 profit without open positions and exposures. Simple?
Not really for small traders, may be for those "big brothers" only. Because it is really hard to
play spread, slippage, stop loss hunting or so on games against brokers.
Carry
Trading:
Carry trading is a well known trading
strategy which an investor sells a certain currency with a relatively low interest rate and uses
the funds to purchase a different currency yielding a higher interest rate. Then this investor
can make profit from the difference of these two interest rates.
JPY is currently considered to be the most popular currency to use as the low interest yielding
currency in the carry trade, because its interest rate is the lowest of the world almost at 0.
And GBP is currently considered to be the high yielding currency. So are NZD and AUD.
When we buy these currency pairs: GBP/JPY, AUD/JPY, GBP/CHF, USD/JPY, or EUR/CHF;
Or sell: EUR/AUD, EUR/GBP, AUD/NZD;
Both actions can yield positive SWAP roll over interest. If
combining with some kinds of hedge trading, we can make as high as 100% profit annually and keep
the risk low.
The big risk in a carry trading is the uncertainty of exchange rates. Also, these transactions
are generally done with a high leverage, so a small movement in exchange rates can result in
huge losses unless hedged appropriately.
Martingale:
Originally, martingale
referred to a class of betting strategies popular in 18th century France. In Forex trading, the
strategy let the trader double his/her order lots after every loss, so that the first win would
recover all previous losses plus win a profit equal to the original investment.
In the example below, you bought 1 lot EUR/USD at 1.4650.
Unfortunately, the rate drops. You play it in martingale way, “double down”, buy two lots, you
need the EUR/USD to rally from 1.4630 to 1.4640 to break even. As the price moves lower and you
add four lots, you only need it to rally to 1.4625 instead of 1.4640 to break even. The more
lots you add, the lower your average entry price. Even though you may lose 100 pips on the first
lot of the EUR/USD if the price hits 1.4550, you only need the currencies pair to rally to
1.4569 to break even on your entire holdings. Once the rate goes up one more pip, you will win a
lot.
|
EUR/USD |
Lots |
Average or Breakeven Price |
|
1.4650 |
1 |
1.4650 |
|
1.4630 |
2 |
1.4640 |
|
1.4610 |
4 |
1.4625 |
|
1.4590 |
8 |
1.4605 |
|
1.4570 |
16 |
1.4588 |
|
1.4550 |
32 |
1.4569 |
The Martingale strategy needs a very strict money
management and you must understand that in the beginning money will be coming slowly, but if you
lose the patience and raise risk level up to much, you may not hang on to the end to see the
turn-around.
Anti-Martingale:
The
anti-martingale strategy is the opposite of the better known martingale approach. This approach
instead increases order lots after wins, while reducing them after a loss. Using an
anti-martingale risk management scheme will increase profits during time periods when a trading
approach is working well, while automatically decreasing exposure during portions of the cycle
where trading is unprofitable. This is believed to decrease the risk of ruin for trading.
This strategy has another
name: "Parlay".
Grid:
Basically the trader sets a
series of entry limit orders X pips from the current price, for example 15 pips. Some
experienced traders like to use the Fibonacci Series Numbers (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, ...) or
Golden Section Numbers to make this grid. Once price hits the level the limit order is executed.
Then every 15 pips there is another order at limit price executed. And so on. In a yo-yo market,
while the price moves up or down, there always be some limit orders executed. Once the order is
taken profit, and the price moves to its original level again, a new limit order shall be
executed again, then repeat the same process. Just open orders and take profits in a set of
"grid". It is simple and easy, but hard to deal with when and how to close all orders,
especially the Stop Loss. Some experts say we do not need stop loss, but will you take the
chance to hold your all positions till "Margin Call?"
Day trading:
This refers to the practice
of buying and selling currencies such that all positions will usually be closed within the
same Forex the trading day. The day trading idea comes from stock market. Day traders rapidly
buy and sell stocks throughout the day in the hope that their stocks will continue climbing or
falling in value for the seconds to minutes they own the stock, allowing them to lock in quick
profits. Day trading is extremely risky and can result in substantial financial losses in a very
short period of time. Under the rules of NYSE and NASD, customers who are deemed "pattern day
traders" must have at least $25,000 in their accounts and can only trade in margin accounts.
But in Forex market, every
one can be a day trader to do day trading. Actually, more than day trading, they can do
“scalping”.
Scalping:
Scalping is a trading style
where small price gaps created by the bid-ask spreads are exploited. It normally involves
establishing and liquidating a position quickly, usually within minutes or even seconds. It
means trying to get a few points (1~3 pips only, no greed, no long term) off the market every
time. This strategy is based on a fact: approximately 70 to 80% of the time, the market is in a
consolidation pattern. What this means is that for the majority of time the market is not making
significant moves. For example, after the USA market is closed and before the Europe market is
open, the Forex market tends to range in a consolidation channel for hours at a time before
making another significant move in one direction. This kind of market behavior pattern is ideal
for Forex scalping. Every time you enter the market, wait 10 or 20 minutes, once you have
several pips gain then cash it and go.
Scalping has some features:
1, Lower exposure, lower
risks. Scalpers are only exposed in a relatively short period.
2, Smaller moves, easier to
obtain. The normal wave of the market will give you several pips easily.
3, Large volume, adding
profits up. Since the profit obtained per share or contract is very small due to its target of
spread, they need to trade large in order to add up the profits. Scalping is not suitable for
small-capital traders.
But be careful, not every
broker welcomes this kind of scalping strategy. If you scalp it too quick and thin, let’s say
you just hit 1 pip every 2 or 3 minutes then run, and repeat it again and again within a day,
every day, you must feel high, eh? But the market maker broker may be not happy and bans you. You will be
kicked out because of your successful scalping! Go to find the ECN brokers, they do not care how
you trade. The more trades, the more commission for them.
Break-Out
Trading:
Using the Bollinger Bands indicator on a chart, we will
find every Forex currencies pair is waving in a "band", or a channel. By finding major support
and resistance levels with technical analysis, a Break-Out strategy trader will buy this pair at
the lower level of support (bottom of the band/channel) and sell them near resistance (top of
the band/channel). Till now there is no Break-Out yet.
Once the price breaks the upper range line with
larger-than-average volume, or the opposite: the price breaks the lower range line with
larger-than-average volume, the chance is coming. The idea of this strategy is that when a
currencies pair breaks out of the channel, it usually experiences a large price movement in the
direction of the breakout. So buy it at the price breaks the upper range line and continue to
hold it until the rate has risen a distance comparable to the height of the range. If it goes
down instead, stop losses as it penetrates the upper range line. Or, sell it at the price breaks
the lower range line, and continue to hold it until the rate has fallen a distance comparable to
the height of the range. If it goes up instead, stop losses as it penetrates the lower range
line.
Pivot:
Besides Support and Resistance levels, many foreign exchange traders like to use another
indicator to analyze and predict currency pairs' price changes, it is so-called: the Pivot
Point. To calculate and analyze pivot is a subset of technical analysis, with this bench mark,
traders can locate the rotation point of the trend, and this is very helpful for deciding when
and where to buy or sell.
Classical Pivot Point, Support and Resistance Formulas are as follows:
Look at any one chart, the pivot is an average of the previous bar’s high, low, and closing
prices. In the following formula, “H” represents the previous bar’s high, “L” represents the
previous bar’s low, and “C” represents the previous bar’s closing price.
Current Bar’s Pivot Point (P)=Previous Bar’s (H+L+C)/3
First level of support and resistance can be calculated as follows:
First Resistance Level (R1)=(2*P)-L
First Support Level (S1)=(2*P)-H
Likewise, the second level of support and resistance:
Second Resistance Level (R2)=P+(R1-S1)
Second Support Level (S2)=P-(R1-S1)
Since many currency pairs tend to fluctuate between Support and Resistance levels, and these
levels are calculated based on Pivot points, so when a trend or breakout trader knows where the
pivot point is, it will enable him/her to find out key levels that need to be broken for a move
to qualify as a breakout.
News Trading:
The
system is developed based on economic news events from around the world. Nearly half of those
announcements have moved the market significantly. Before a big news is coming, we can buy and
sell some currency pairs at the same time, same lots, set stop loss prices for them. After the
news is released, especially for the big one, both sides of buy order and sell order will jump
significantly. No matter which order is a winner, just let it go. And the loser will hit the
Stop Loss, just let it be. The winner’s gain minus the loser’s loss, it is your news trading
profit. For example, Non-Farm Payrolls/Employment Report - The NFP is the most influential news
release of every month. It's announced on the first Friday of the month at 8:30am EST for the
prior month. We can put a buy order and a sell order at market prices for GBP/USD, at 8:29 am
EST. Don’t forget, set 30 pips Stop Loss level for them. Wait 2 minutes only, the news is
announced, it is a big one! Then the sell order jumps over 100 pips, and the buy order drops
like a brick. The brick hits the Stop Loss and the pain is over. Totally, your gain could be
100-30=70 pips.
Or, before the big news is
coming, let us set two pending orders for both sides. Once the news is announced, either buy
pending order or sell pending order will be triggered. Then delete the dumb one and ride the
running one, some people call it "Straddle". Quick and easy, cool enough?
Trend Following:
It is so
simple, just follow and ride the trend. Buy it is the most difficult strategy because no one can tell you
100% for sure what is the right TREND. Go to look at a weekly chat of USD/CAD, if you had
shorted this pair in September 2001 and held it till September 2007, you know what the trend
means.
The most famous trend
analysis tool seems the Wave Principle. In the 1930s, Ralph Nelson Elliott discovered that stock
market prices trend and reverse in recognizable patterns. Elliott isolated five such patterns,
or “waves,” that recur in market price data.
Another trend analysis guru
should be W. D. Gann. In 1908, Gann discovered what he called the "market time factor", which
made him one of the pioneers of technical analysis. To test his new strategy, he opened one
account with $300 and one with $150. It turned out to be wildly successful: Gann was able to
make $25,000 profit with his $300 account in only three months; meanwhile, he made $12,000
profit with his $150 account in only 30 days! After his results were verified, he became famous
on Wall Street as one of the best forecasters of all time.
Back to the
chat of USD/CAD, now, please tell me, how to follow the trend? Will
USD/CAD continue the trend which is going south further to 0.6000, or, another trend going north
reversely back to 1.6000?
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