Get all the information about the About About forex, Forex Additional info, Forex benifits, Forex Market, Forex Money management, Forex Quotes, Forex Tips, Forex Trading, Forex Latest News, FOrex Latest Rates, currency trading, Forex Exchange Rate, Forex Charting, Forex Mini, Foreign Exchange, Foreign Exchange Calculator, Forex Technical Analysis, international Currency, Online Forex
Showing posts with label Forex Market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forex Market. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2009

Psychological Pitfalls

Here are some additional psychological pitfalls to avoid. Be wary of
depending on others for your success. Most of the people you are
likely to trust are probably not effective traders. For instance:
brokers, gurus, advisors, friends. There are exceptions, but not
many. Depend on others only for clerical help or to support your
own decision-making process.
You may acquire trading methods or systems from others or from
books, but be sure to test them carefully yourself before trading.
Good systems that you can buy come with computer software that
allows comprehensive historical testing.
Don't blame others for your failures. This is an easy trap to fall into.
No matter what happens, you put yourself into the situation.
Therefore, you are responsible for the ultimate result. Until you
accept responsibility for everything, you will not be able to change
your incorrect behaviors.
Stay long-term oriented. Don't adjust your approach based solely on
short-term performance. Through luck, any horrible system can look
great, even for relatively long periods of time. Conversely, the best
systems have frequent losing periods. If you judge a system by

short-term performance, you are likely to reject the best systems
that exist.
Most traders have such an ego investment in their trading that they
cannot handle losses. Several losses in a row are devastating. This
causes them to evaluate trading methods and systems based on
very-short-term performance. Don't start trading a system based on
only a few trades, and don't lose confidence in one after only a few
losses. Evaluate performance based on many trades and multi-year
results.
Don't underestimate the psychological difficulty of successful
trading. Robert Rotella describes the trauma in The Elements of
Successful Trading: "Trading is one of the most stressful endeavors
imaginable. Taking losses day after day with a strategy that, just a
short while ago was working well, can be a terrible experience.
Trading performance can be consistently volatile with good and bad
times highly magnified. The market can batter your psyche and
gnaw at your soul. These bad experiences will never end as long as
you trade. The more successful you are as a trader, the more
money you will lose."
Keep trading in correct perspective and as part of a balanced life.
Trading is emotionally intensive no matter whether you are doing
well or going in the tank. It is easy to let the emotions of the moment
lead you into strategic and tactical blunders.
Don't become too elated during successful periods. One of the
biggest mistakes traders make is to increase their trading after an
especially successful period. This is the worst thing you can do
because good periods are invariably followed by awful periods. If
you increase your trading just before the awful periods, you will lose
money twice as fast as you made it.
Knowing how to increase trading in a growing account is perhaps
the most difficult problem for successful traders. Be cautious in
adding to your trading. The best times to add are after losses or
equity drawdowns.
Don't become too depressed during drawdowns. Trading is a lot like
golf. All golfers, regardless of their ability, have cycles of good play
and poor play. When a golfer is playing well, he assumes he has
found some secret in his swing and will never play poorly again.
When he is hitting the ball sideways, he despairs that he will never
come out of his slump.

Trading is much the same. When you are making money, you are
thinking about how wonderful trading is and how to expand your
trading to achieve immense wealth. When you are losing, you often
think about giving up trading completely. With a little practice, you
can control both emotional extremes. You'll probably never control
them completely, but at least don't let elation and despair cause you
to make unwarranted changes in your approach.
Other common themes of good traders are self-understanding,
balance and self-control. If you can master yourself, you can master
the futures markets.

Elements of a Successful Trading Plan--Manage Risk

The final cardinal principle of trading overlays all the rest. It is
Manage Risk. This is as crucial as the others because it is by
managing risk that you limit losses and preserve your capital.
The most important element of managing risk is keeping losses
small, which is already part of your trading plan. Never give in to
fear or hope when it comes to keeping losses small. Preventing
large individual losses is one of the easiest things a trader can do to
maximize his chance of long-term success.
Another element of risk is the market you trade. Some markets are
more volatile and more risky than others. Some markets are
comparatively tame. If you have a small account, don't trade big-
money, wild-swinging contracts like the S&P 500 stock index. Don't
be above using the smaller-sized Mid-America contracts to keep
risk in proportion to your capital. Don't feel you have to trade any

market that might make a move. Emphasize risk control over
achieving big profits.
The biggest risks to commodity traders come from surprise events
that move the markets too quickly to exit at their pre-determined
give-up point. While you can never eliminate these risks entirely,
you can guard against them by advance planning. Pay attention to
the risk of surprise events such as crop reports, freezes, floods,
currency interventions and wars. Most of the time there is some
manifestation of the potential. Don't overtrade in markets where
these kinds of events are possible.
Trade in correct proportion to your capital. Have realistic
expectations. Don't overtrade your account. One of the most
pernicious roadblocks to success is greed. Commodity trading is
attractive precisely because it is possible to make big money in a
short period of time. Paradoxically, the more you try to fulfill that
expectation, the less likely you are to achieve anything.
The pervasive hype that permeates the industry leads people to
believe that they can achieve spectacular returns if only they try
hard enough. However, risk is always commensurate with reward.
The bigger the return you pursue, the bigger the risk you must take.
Even assuming you are using a method that gives you a statistical
edge, which almost nobody is, you must still suffer through
agonizing equity drawdowns on your way to eventual success.
It is better to shoot for smaller returns to begin with until you get the
hang of staying with your system through the tough periods that
everyone encounters. Professional money managers are generally
satisfied with consistent annual returns of twenty percent. If talented
professionals should be satisfied with that, what should you be
satisfied with? Surprisingly, disciplined individuals can do better. It is
realistic for a good mechanical system diversified in the best
markets to expect annual returns in the twenty-five to fifty percent
range.
One last thing about creating a trading plan. Don't be enticed into
trading options as a less risky alternative to futures. While the dollar
risk of buying puts and calls may appear lower and more certain, the
probability of long-term success is remote.
Experienced professional traders, such as Larry Williams, agree:
"Options are a very difficult game because you have to do two
things: You have to beat the market and beat the clock. Perhaps
some sophisticated people can trade options. I've been trading

stocks and commodities successfully for over thirty years, but I don't
trade options because it's too tough."
The best way to trade options is to sell them to small speculators.
That's what options professionals do. However, selling options has
more risk and is more difficult than trading futures. Unless you are
well-capitalized and committed to a full-time career as a
professional options player, stick to futures.
Although the commodity markets appear complex from the outside,
making money trading is quite simple. You use an historically
proven plan that trades with the trend, cuts losses short and lets
profits run. You trade your system in a carefully-selected group of
markets. You start with sufficient capital and pay close attention to
managing risk. Richard Dennis made his $200 million following
precisely this kind of trading approach.

Elements of a Successful Trading Plan--Cut Losses Short

If you are following market trends rather than trying to anticipate
them, the next important part of the plan is how to exit trades that
don't work out. Here is where the second cardinal principle comes
in. It is Cut Losses Short.
This is another sensible-sounding concept that is much easier to
acknowledge than actually to execute when real money is on the
line. No one wants to exit a trade with a loss. They don't want to
lose money. More importantly, they don't want to admit they were
wrong. You can always think of many reasons to hold on to a losing
trade. You can hope that the market will suddenly turn around and
give you a profit instead of a loss.
This is another example where successful traders have learned to
do the hard thing. If there is one thing consistent in the stories of
how good traders turned themselves around from being bad traders,
it is their attitude about losses. Professional traders accept that
losses are part of the game. Since the markets are mostly random,
the best trading methods will always have numerous losses.
Professionals do not equate losses with being wrong.
It is precisely because correct trading methods invariably generate
many losses that it is important to keep the individual losses small in
relation to the overall size of the account. In order to keep trading,
you must preserve your capital. If you can keep trading in the
direction of the trend, the big profits will come. However, if you take
too many large losses, your capital will be wiped out before you can
enjoy the big profitable trades.
The laws of probability insure that regardless of your approach, you
will inevitably suffer some long strings of consecutive losses. If you

are risking too high a percentage of your account on each trade,
before long one of these unavoidable losing streaks will blow you
away. Keeping losses to about one percent of your account size is
optimal. With smaller accounts, the percentage will have to be
larger. Five percent on one trade is probably the highest prudent
level of risk.
Because of the randomness in commodity price action, you must
allow the market a certain amount of leeway before giving up on a
trade. In general, you must be willing to risk between $500 and
$1,000 to trade most markets. For smaller accounts, the Mid
America Exchange offers trading with smaller sized contracts that
allow you to trade with lower risk.
While there are more sophisticated ways to decide when to exit a
losing trade, getting out after a loss of a predetermined dollar
amount is as good a way as any. The important thing is to respect
your plan. You can place a stop-loss order with your broker that
instructs him in advance to exit a trade if the market hits your loss
limit. You should always do this to guard against inattention or
changing your mind at the crucial moment.

Elements of a Successful Trading Plan--Trade With The Trend

Trading with the trend is hard to do because a logical give-up exit
point will be farther away, potentially causing a larger loss if you are
wrong. This is a good example of why so few traders are successful.
They can't bring themselves to trade in a psychologically difficult
way.
You can define the concept of trend only in relation to a particular
time frame. When you determine the trend, it must be, for example,
the two-week trend or the six-month trend or the hourly trend. So an
important part of a trading plan is deciding what time frame to use
for making these decisions.
Do you want to be a long-term trader, also called a position trader?
They hold positions for weeks or months. Do you want to be a short-
term trader who holds positions only for a few days? There are even
very short-term traders called day traders. They watch the markets
during the day and always enter and exit their positions on the same
day.
While it is perhaps easier psychologically to keep the time frame
short, the best results come from longer-term trading. The longer
you hold a trade, the greater your profit can be.
Day trading has great attraction because you can start each day
fresh and sleep comfortably every night with no open positions.
However, it is the most difficult kind of trading there is. Here's how
legendary trader Larry Williams describes it: "Day trading is so
stressful. You're going to end up frying your brain. All the day
traders I talk with are losing money. Besides, it's really hard to come
up with profitable day trading systems."
For the greatest chance of success, your time frame to measure
trends should be at least four weeks. Thus, you should only enter
trades in the direction of the price trend for the last four weeks or
more. A good example of a trend-following entry rule would be to
buy whenever today's closing price is higher than the closing price

of 25 market days ago, and sell whenever today's closing price is
lower than the closing price of 25 market days ago.
When you trade in the direction of this long a trend, you are truly
following the markets rather than predicting them. Most
unsuccessful traders spend their entire careers looking for better
ways to predict the markets.

Elements of a Successful Trading Plan--Getting Started

The first element of any trading plan is the amount of capital you
intend to invest. This is up to you, but you should understand that
there is a direct relationship between the amount of capital you
commit and your probability of success. The more you invest, the
greater is the likelihood that you will make money.
What is the minimum advisable amount to start with? Most
professionals agree that it takes a minimum of $10,000. If you try to
trade with anything less, what happens to you will be luck. You won't
have the capital necessary to apply proper risk management
principles.
An important thing to keep in mind when deciding how much to
commit initially to commodity trading is that the amount you invest
must be "risk capital." Risk capital is defined as money you can
afford to lose without affecting your standard of living. It should also
be money that you feel comfortable risking. Think of your commodity
account as an investment in a business. Many businesses fail.
That's life. Make sure you won't be so afraid of losing money that it
will affect your ability to make correct trading decisions.
The next part of your trading plan involves how you will make your
actual buying and selling decisions. Under what conditions will you
enter trades? When will you exit your trades? What markets will you
trade?
There are four cardinal principles which should be part of every
trading strategy. They are: 1) Trade with the trend, 2) Cut losses
short, 3) Let profits run, and 4) Manage risk. These building blocks
are so basic and important that I have written a whole book about

them. You should make sure your strategy includes each of these
requirements for success.

Separating the Winners and Losers

A very high percentage of those who try commodity trading
eventually lose money. The ratio of losers could be as high as
ninety-five percent. However, this does not necessarily mean that
your chance of failure is that high. If, before you begin, you identify
correctly the reasons most people lose, you can improve your odds
significantly.
There is a small percentage of full-time professionals and highly
skilled part-time traders who have learned how to trade correctly
and generate consistent profits year after year. It is not impossible
to determine what separates these people from the crowd.
Because trading well is not easy, you must approach the task very
seriously. This is not something to treat as a hobby. Perhaps, first
and foremost, this is what separates professionals from amateurs.
Professionals look at their trading as a business. There are
substantial profits to be made, and they will not just fall into your lap.

Another crucial difference between successful and unsuccessful
traders is that the successful ones have a plan and they follow it.
Considering the amount of money involved and the potential risks, it
is remarkable how few traders actually have any kind of plan for
their trading. They go from trade to trade applying various ideas
they have learned without any consistency and without any testing.
They make decisions based on hot tips, something they read,
today's news. They are acting from emotion rather than using a
proven methodology. While they may not want to admit it, they are
really gambling in the futures markets rather than trading
intelligently.
Trading by emotion in an unstructured way certainly adds fun and
entertainment to the enterprise. Taking positions on instinct is
exciting, especially when they work out . . . as they often do. But in
the end, this kind of trading will lose money.
Good trading is boring because you've thought out your strategy
and tactics in advance. You trade according to a carefully tested
system or method, not from what moves you emotionally that day.
Two psychological traits that separate winners from losers are
patience and discipline. It is not enough to have a carefully tested
trading plan. You must also be able to follow it religiously. This is
not as easy as you may think.
Every experienced trader knows how great the temptation is to stray
from the plan. There is always what seems to be a good reason.
The true professional can resist this temptation and stick to his plan.
He has the patience to wait for his method to signal a trade and not
take trades he may be emotionally attracted to that are outside his
plan. He has the discipline to follow his plan and take all the trades
that it signals even when there appear to be strong reasons to make
an exception.
This may sound easy, but when real money is on the line--your
money--nothing is more difficult. The kind of trading that really works
is emotionally demanding.
It is hard work to create a winning trading plan. It is hard
psychologically to follow the plan after you create it. This is why so
many people fail. Perhaps you have what it takes to be an
exception.

The Truth About the Commodity Markets

In order to be a successful trader, you must understand the true
realities of the markets. You must learn how the professionals make
money and what is possible. Most traders come into commodity
trading, lose a substantial portion of their capital and then leave
trading without ever having a correct perception of what good
trading is all about.
For many years college professors have argued that the markets
are both random and highly efficient. If this were true, it would be
impossible to gain an edge on other investors by having superior
knowledge or a superior approach.
Professional traders, who make their living trading rather than
studying the markets from afar, have always laughed at these ivory
tower theories. A good example is George Soros, who has made
billions of dollars from trading and is perhaps the greatest trader of
all time. Here is how he responds to these ivory tower academics:
"The [random walk] theory is manifestly false--I have disproved it by
consistently outperforming the averages over a period of twelve
years. Institutions may be well advised to invest in index funds
rather than making specific investment decisions, but the reason is
to be found in their substandard performance, not in the
impossibility of outperforming the averages."
Mathematicians have conclusively shown the financial markets to be
what are called non-linear, dynamic systems. Chaos theory is the
mathematics of analyzing such non-linear, dynamic systems. The
commodity markets are chaotic systems. Such systems can
produce random-looking results that are not truly random. Chaos
research has proved that the markets are not efficient, and they are
not forecastable. Commodity market price movement is highly
random with a small trend component.
Most beginning traders assume that the way to make money is to
learn how to predict where market prices are going next. As chaos
theory suggests, the truth is that the markets are not predictable
except in the most general way.

In his book, Methods of a Wall Street Master, famous trader Vic
Sperandeo, whose nickname is "Trader Vic," warns: "Many people
make the mistake of thinking that market behavior is truly
predictable. Nonsense. Trading in the markets is an odds game,
and the object is always keep the odds in your favor."
Luckily, as Trader Vic suggests, successful trading does not require
effective prediction mechanisms. Good trading involves following
trends in a time frame where you can be profitable.
The trend is your edge. If you follow trends with proper risk
management methods and good market selection, you will make
money in the long run. Good market selection refers to trading in
good trending markets generally rather than selecting a particular
situation likely to result in an immediate trend.
There are three related hurdles for traders. The first is finding a
trading method that actually has a statistical edge. Second is
following it with consistency. Third is consistently following the
method long enough for the edge to manifest itself on the bottom
line.
This statistical edge is what separates speculating from gambling. In
fact, effective trading is actually like the gambling casino rather than
the gambling customer. Professional trader Peter Brandt explains
successful trading in just this way: "A successful commodity trading
program must be based on the simple premise that no one really
knows what the markets are going to do. We can guess, but we
don't know. The best a commodity trader can hope for is an
approach which provides a slight edge. Like a gambling casino, the
trader must earn his profits by exploiting that edge over an extended
series of trades. But on any given trade, like an individual casino
bet, the edge is pretty meaningless."
Unsuccessful and frustrated commodity traders want to believe
there is an order to the markets. They think prices move in
systematic ways that are highly disguised. They hope they can
somehow acquire the "secret" to the price system that will give them
an advantage. They think successful trading will result from highly
effective methods of predicting future price direction. These deluded
souls have been falling for crackpot methods and systems since the
markets started trading.
Prolific futures trading author Jake Bernstein describes how these
desperate traders are victimized: "Futures trading is ultimately very
simple. Any attempt to make trading complex is a smokescreen. Yet

for self-serving reasons an army of greed-motivated promoters try to
make things complicated. Too many market professionals consider
it their mission in life to obfuscate. Why? Because in so doing they
give the appearance that their efforts are scholarly and important.
They create a need for more information, and then they fill it!"
Books on how to trade commodities are famous for showing a few
well-chosen examples where a described prediction method
previously worked. They never show what would have happened if
you had applied the method religiously for many years in numerous
markets. Those who have tested these methods have found that in
the long run almost all of them don't work. Be wary of any trading
method unless you see a detailed demonstration showing that it has
worked for at least five to ten years in a variety of different markets
using exactly the same rules.
The job of the person who wants to trade commodities rationally and
prudently is to ignore the promises of those promoting pie-in-the-sky
prediction mechanisms and concentrate on finding and
implementing a proven, integrated methodology that follows market
trends.

Friday, November 21, 2008

A Guide to Desiphering Forex Quotes

Learning to read forex quotes can be a challenge. They present different information than the standard common stock quotes with which most folks are familiar. Should you determine, after spending plenty of time building a forex trading strategy, that you are ready to enter the forex trading market, then you need to make sure that you know how to properly read the foreign exchange trading quotes.

The first part of the quote lets the forex trader know which currency is involved. The nation listed first is referred to as the base currency. This means the trader currently holds that currency and he is using it to buy the quote currency, sometimes called the trade currency. For example, a quote that reads USD/JPY means that the forex trader currently holds United States Dollars and wants to trade them for Japanese Yen. Forex quotes always begin this way, with the two currencies involved forming what's called the cross.

Quick fact : The Forex market is by far the largest financial market in the world, and includes trading between large banks,central banks, currency speculators,multinational corporations, governments, and other financial markets and institutions.

The second part of forex quotes that a person needs to pay attention to is the pricing portion of the quote. To continue the example from above, if the quote reads USD/JPY=117.57, then the trader knows that for every $1 (USD) he trades, he will get 117.57 Japanese Yen (JPY) in return. While that may seem really simple, there are a few more details of these quotes that a forex trader needs to take note of before making the trade.

Did you know that the average daily trade in the global forex markets currently exceeds US$ 2-2.5 trillion !

Following the initial line of the quote, which contains the two currencies that form the cross and the exchange rate, is another line of information. This is probably more familiar to common stock traders. Bid prices and ask prices, which make up an integral part of forex quotes, function in forex much the same way. The bid price is the price at which a trader can sell the currency or in other words, that is the price that people are willing to pay for it. The buy price is what a trader will have to pay if he wants to buy the currency. There is usually a difference between the bid and the buy numbers, but it is seldom substantial.

Things to Know to Deal With Foreign Currency Exchange

The main purpose of the foreign currency exchange market is to make money but it is different from other equity markets. There are various technical terminologies and strategies a trader must know to deal with currency exchange. This article will give an insight into the normal operations in the foreign currency exchange market.

In the Currency Exchange market the commodity that is traded is the foreign currency. These foreign currencies are always priced in pairs. The value of one unit of a foreign currency is always expressed in terms of another foreign currency. Thus all trades incorporate the purchase and sale of two foreign currencies at the same time. You have to buy a currency only when you expect the value of that currency to increase in the future. When it increases in value, you have to purchase the currencies you have bought to make your profit. When you buy or sell a currency then the trade is called open trade or in open position and can be closed only when you sell or buy an equivalent amount of currency.

You must also understand how the currencies are quoted in the currency exchange market. They are always quoted in pairs as USD/JPY. The first currency is the base currency and the second one is the quote currency. The quote value depends on the currency conversion rates between the two currencies under consideration. Mostly the USD will be used as based currency but sometimes euro, pound sterling is also used.

The profit of the broker depends on the bid and the ask price. The bid is the price the broker is ready to pay to buy base currency for exchanging the quote currency. The ask is the price the broker is ready to sell the base currency for exchanging the quote currency. The difference between these two prices is called the spread which determines the profit or loss of the trade.

The bid and ask prices are quoted in five figures. The spread is measured in pip which is defined as the smallest change in price based on the current conversion rates of the currencies under consideration. For USD/JPY if the bid price is 136.50 and ask price is 136.55 then spread is 5 pips and you have to recover the five pips from your profit.

Margin used in the foreign currency exchange terminology refers to the deposit that a trader makes to his account to cover any losses expected in the future. A high degree of leverage is supplied by the brokers to traders for currency exchange. The ratio is 100:1 normally. The brokerage system will calculate the funds required for the current trade and will check for the availability of margin before executing any trade.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

5 Risks The Novice Forex Trader Needs To Be Aware Of

Forex trading, just like most other forms of trading, carries risks and the novice Forex trader needs to be aware of these before dipping a toe into the foreign exchange pond. Here we will consider the 5 most common risks of foreign currency trading.

1. Forex scams. In recent years the industry has done a great deal to put its house in order and today Forex scams are certainly far less common than they used to be. They do however still exist.

It is fairly easy to open a Forex trading account, especially online, and a Forex scam in its simplest form is a case of a crook setting up a website posing as a broker, inviting you to open an account and deposit money into it and then disappearing without trace.

To ensure that you do not get caught out check out any broker carefully before opening an account. Choose a broker who is associated with a major financial institution (for example, a bank or insurance company) and who is also registered as a broker. In the United States brokers will be registered with the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) or will be a member of the National Futures Association (NFA).

2. Exchange Rates. One of the attractions of the foreign exchange market is that it can be extremely volatile with currencies moving significantly against each other in very short periods of time giving rise to fast and substantial gains. The other side of this coin however is that the market can also produce substantial and rapid losses.

Fortunately there are tools available to the trader to limit this risk, such as stop loss orders, and novice traders need to familiarize themselves with these tools and to ensure that they make full use of them whenever they enter a trade.

3. Credit Risk. Because there are two parties (a seller and a buyer) involved in every transaction there is a possibility that one party will fail to honor his or her commitment once a deal is closed. This usually happens where a bank or financial institution declares insolvency.

You can reduce any credit risk considerably by trading only on regulated exchanges which require members to be monitored to ensure their credit worthiness.

4. Interest Rates. When trading any pair of currencies traders need to watch for discrepancies between the underlying interest rates in the two countries in question, as any discrepancy can result in a difference between the profit predicted and that which is actually received.

5. Country Risk. Occasionally a government will intervene in the foreign currency exchange markets to limit the flow of its country’s currency. It is unlikely that this will happen in the case of a major world currency but could occur in the case of minor and less frequently traded currencies.

These of course are just some of the risks involved in Forex trading and novice traders will need to familiarize themselves with the others as they go along. However, a good understanding of the 5 risks detailed here is essential before you enter the trading arena.

Digg!

You Must Have A Forex Trading Strategy Before You Start Foreign Currency Trading

If you are new to the world of Forex trading then, before you even think about making your first trade, you need to sit down and draw up a Forex trading strategy. The foreign currency market is one of the most exciting and lucrative markets in the world, but it is also extremely fast moving and volatile and, while you can make tremendous profits, you can also make substantial losses if you don not have a very clearly defined game plan.

There are a number of different strategies which you can adopt for trading in the currency markets and you will need to come up with a strategy that suits you. At the end of the day exactly what strategy you decide to adopt is largely immaterial but, what is important, is that have you a strategy before you start to trade.

Many traders today choose to base their strategy on a technical approach to trading while others prefer to follow a fundamental approach. Both approaches are fine but the truly successful traders will tell you that the real secret lies in not selecting one or the other but in combining the two.

Technical analysis holds that prices follow trends and that markets possess clearly identifiable patterns which can be recognized if you know what you are looking for. Both knowledge and experience play an important role in technical analysis but here it is a case of knowledge and experience of not just the patterns in the market but of working with the barrage of tools which are know available to the technical analyst.

Within technical analysis many traders like to work with what are called support and resistance levels. In this case a support price is a low price to which a currency repeatedly returns, effectively representing the bottom of the market or the price at which it supports the market. By contrast, a resistance price is the high price which a currency reaches from time to time but above which it tends to resist rising.

The importance of these two levels is that once a currency price drops below its support level it will commonly continue to fall and, similarly, once the price exceeds its resistance level it will continue to climb.

It is also common for technical analysts to make use of moving averages which show the average price of a currency over a given period of time within a longer period. This is extremely useful for eliminating short term fluctuations in a currency price and producing a clearer picture of the movement of a currency over time.

These of course are just two of the many tools available to Forex traders who are following a technical approach and there is a wide range of far more complex and powerful tools available today.

In addition to technical analysis, many traders also believe strongly in fundamental analysis which holds that currencies move in response to a wide range of factors including political events, changes in trade agreements and trading patterns, economic numbers, interest rates, employment figures and much more.

Digg!

Forex Information For More Educated Trading Decisions

The concepts of Globalization have changed the forex trading dramatically over the past several years. New investment strategies and instant electronic trading now ensures high returns for the investors. Therefore it has become quite important for the traders to have authentic forex information. Internet and other electronic sources like CDs, DVDs, etc., are fast replacing the conventional resources like books, magazines, etc.
The advantages of these electronic sources are there ‘interactive’ modules and ease of navigation, which make them faster and more effective for even beginners to comprehend the information. Dynamic features like search or graphical representation of live data with two or three dimensional charts, graphs, and ‘easy to learn’ e books are presented quite attractively to help the readers in understanding the subject.
You can have online forex information on:


* Forex definitions and terms including glossary

* Market background information and the developmental stages of the trading

* Trading strategy and decision making

* Different methods of Technical and Fundamental analysis

* Controlling the risk


Forex trading has long been recognized as a superior investment opportunity and the market is expanding to the individual small or medium traders than ever before. If you are powered by the knowledge and keep yourself informed, you have huge potential for earning from the market. Internet sites offer you wide ranges of e books which are classified in different groups like: forex books for beginners, books on market in general, on market profile basics, money management, trader's psychology, strategy and even books for advanced traders for supplementing their knowledge.
Forex information in the form of articles is again an exhaustive resource. One single site may present 2000 featured articles from which you can read any depending on your needs. These articles can be on brokerage, technical and fundamental analysis, money management, general tips or strategy building etc.
There are vendors or market professionals who offer forex tips and signals, which you can have by subscribing to their services. You can have information on forex market analysis, charts and technical analysis, trading platforms, facility to open demo account, etc. Different forex forums and groups are again a very useful resource for authentic information. You may find your queries being answered by veteran forex traders and the best thing is, most of the time, these tips are free. These traders very often share useful strategies and tips that proves to be extremely helpful.
Other than these electronic resources, you can always authenticate the forex information from books and magazines. Crash courses and short term seminars organized by different universities also prove to be helpful for those who are comfortable with the conventional class room mode of learning. Another advantage of these seminars is you get your doubts cleared by the experts directly. So the buzzword is to get informed and educated before you tread into the trade.


Digg!

Forex Charts - Using The ADX Indicator For Bigger Profits

If you're using charts, then you want to trade the strong trends - and the Average Directional Movement Index Indicator, or ADX, enables you to do this.

Wells Wilder developed the ADX, and outlined it in his classic book “New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems”.

Let’s look at this essential indicator in more detail - and see how to apply it on your forex charts, to give you greater accuracy when generating your trading signals.

Determining the Strength of the Trend

The ADX is a momentum indicator, which aims to measure the strength of the trend - and attempts to determine if the market is trending, or is trading sideways.

The Advantages of the ADX

A core belief of technical analysis is that a strong trend in motion is more likely to continue, than reverse. Therefore, you always want to be trading strong trends - as your odds of success are higher. The Average Directional Movement is a good indictor – and you should consider using it as part of your currency trading system.

The Technical Bit

For the boffin’s out there, here’s the technical bit – don’t worry if you don’t understand the calculation, its easy to use when visually plotted. The ADX is based on the comparison of two other directional indicators, both of which were also developed by Wilder, and they are:

Positive Directional Indicator (+DI) and the Negative Directional Indicator (-DI) to produce ADX as showed in the following formula:

ADX = SUM[(+DI-(-DI))/(+DI+(-DI)), N]/N

Where:

N: Refers to the period of calculation. The formula above produces the ADX line, which oscillates between 0 to 100 values. The +DI and -DI are both present and can be seen to make up the indicator.

You don’t need to understand the above calculation to use the indicator – you only need to accept that the indicator works.

The indicator is easy to use when it’s visually plotted - and you’ll find it included, with most of the good forex chart services.

How to Trade using the ADX Indicator

The ADX it’s not a bullish, bearish trading signal generator - and should never be used as such.

The ADX indicator simply indicates the strength of the trend - and other indicators should be used to enter, and exit trades.

Although the ADX fluctuates from 0 to 100, it rarely moves above 60.

Use the ADX in the following way:

Readings above 40 indicate the strength of the trend.

Readings below 20 indicate range trading and flat periods of consolidation.

You can use the crossing of +DI and -DI to determine the trend direction; when +DI crosses -DI upward, it’s a bullish signal, on the other hand, when +DI crosses -DI downward it’s a bearish signal.

The ADX line is a great momentum indicator and like the RSI (also developed by Wells Wilder), the ADX it will help you trade the strongest trends - and give you advance warning of changes in momentum.

The Bottom Line

If you want currency trading success, you can’t just trade support and resistance levels, and hope they hold or break. You need confirmation of momentum to get the odds on your side - and the ADX indicator will assist you.

Final Words

New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems was published in 1978, and was one of the first trading books I ever bought. Every trader should make this book a part of his or her forex education. If you want to learn forex trading the right way, get the book, and use the ADX indicator to increase your chances of making big FX Profits.


Digg!

Forex Technical Analysis – 6 Simple Tips For Bigger Profits

Using forex technical analysis can and does help traders make big profits however you have to know how to use it correctly, to achieve currency trading success and that’s what this article is all about.

Let’s look at six tips to make your forex technical analysis successful.

1. Trade Valid Data

Using technical analysis on forex charts is designed to get the odds in your favour and to trade the odds you need meaningful data. Do NOT day trade – day traders never win as all short term volatility is random.

Either swing trade look for trades that last a week or long term trend follow.

2. Use Weekly and daily charts

Don’t just use daily charts - use the weekly chart as well to spot the major trends – remember in currency trading currency trends follow economic cycles and these can last for several years and they are apparent on the weekly chart.

You can then use the daily chart to time your trading signals and entry and exit points.

3. Understand Support and Resistance

All successful forex traders need to understand support and resistance and you want to look for valid levels – These are levels that have been tested several times ( at least 3 ) and preferably in two different time frames.

Try and trade these valid levels and again start with the weekly chart first and see if they line up with the daily levels – these are the very best set ups.

4. Understand Breakout Methodology

While support and resistance can hold they can obviously break as well and it’s a fact that many of the major trends in forex trading take place form new market highs NOT market lows.

Many forex traders hate buying new highs as they feel they have missed a bit of the move – while this is true these trends simply accelerate away and you should grit your teeth and enter.

5. Use Momentum to your advantage

So will support or resistance break or hold? You don’t know and you should never predict or hope you should use momentum indicators.

Whenever you enter a trade your view should always be supported by price momentum. Two of the best indicators are the stochastic and Relative Strength Index. They will help you time your trades better get the odds on your side and help you make bigger profits.

Never make the major mistake that most traders do in forex technical analysis of trying to trade without momentum if you do you will lose.

6. Keep it simple

Your system should be simple – simple systems work best as they have less elements to break and are more robust in real time trading.

You can trade successfully and make a lot of money just basing your system on the tools we have outlined above.

6. Be Patient and be disciplined

Be patient don’t trade for the sake of trading.

Only execute treading signals that your forex technical analysis system generates and don’t lose discipline and chase losses or try and hurry profits.

When you have entered a trade maintain discipline and make sure you place a stop and have a realistic target.

Our view of forex technical analysis may strike you as simplistic and it is but after trading for 25 years and trying just about every method out there we have found the above works and makes us money and maybe it can help you to.


Digg!

Treat Trading Less Like a Hobby and More Like a Business

At Emerald Passport they have a video that educates you regarding the pitfalls of FOREX trading. I suggest you go to Emerald Passport and watch the video before proceeding with this article.

When Emerald Passport-educated traders, or any day traders, consider securing a new trading system for stock market trading, they stereotypically do not mull over the expenditure of ownership. But, there are numerous considerations that new Emerald Passport traders should consider when purchasing a modern piece of software, like the price tag of keeping up the software and the expense of the facts and figures the program will need to function.

The outlay for owning a trading system or charting bundle for trading the stock market can be very prohibitive. Several factors come into play when looking at the overall cost, like the type of market you trade and whether or not you plan to use end-of-day or real-time statistics. The format of the information can make a difference too. A package that requires a detailed data structure can be more costly to own. Two common formats of facts and figures for trading software are Metastock and ASCII.

There are pros and cons of using both. But since these are among the industry standards for statistics organization, and make data sellers more abundant, there is more rivalry. Evidently, it is this competition that keys the amount down. When the Emerald Passport trader mulls over a real-time service, they can end up paying much more. However, the cost may be right depending on how regularly the trader trades and the type of market he or she trades.

A trader who trades in markets such as futures, can incur a good deal of volatility and, therefore, they may want to have a real-time package where they can see the instability of instability that occur during the day in the plans of their trading. An alternate to real-time is a delayed service. A provision that delivers delayed quotes can cut the cost of the facts and figures by as much as 80% from the real-time counterpart. This can make a vast difference for traders who are just starting out and may want to use the money to trade rather than pay for real-time data.

The expense of buying a trading system can be pretty frightening for beginners and professionals alike, regardless of whether or not you are interested in stock market trading or some other market. When considering purchasing a firsthand system, should take the cost of their statistics feed into account. This sets their foot firmly on the path of treating FOREX trading less like a hobby and more like a business.


Digg!

Monday, March 17, 2008

HYIP Owner Does Not Want You To Read This Easy Tactics

HYIPs bring me $8289.68 in this month. How did I get this money without work? Answer is simple: I followed my golden rules of HYIP investing. I have compiled a short list of some of the things you can do before investing into a program to make sure you get the most for your money:

#1 - Look at the main HYIP monitoring sites such as theHYIPs.net. Main aspect that you should check it is status of program. If program has status PROBLEM most likely this HYIP will be closed in next 2 days. Look at votes and comments. If it looks like a program has been cheating the ratings by voting for themselves, or it looks like they may have hired a paid voter, then stay away. Check the voters IP, maybe the cheaters were not careful and didn't use a proxy

#2 - Search all HYIP forums for the name of the HYIP. Maybe, somebody created topic about program which you want. . Look for people's opinions. Often those who have been investing in HYIPs for some time are the ones with the best insite. If you see that somebody are spamming it is sign of short HYIP. Most importantly, look for complaints of people who have not been paid.

#3 - Do a search on google. Copy small parts (1-2 sentences) of the text from both the homepage and the page with information on how they make their returns. Paste it into the google search bar with quotes around it, and see if anything comes up. A good amount of the time, google will return results that are an exact match, usually a professional traders website. Also, do the same thing with any images of people that are shown to look as though they are the admin of the program. Simply get the name of the file that the image is uploaded as by viewing the properties of it. Then paste this into the google image search. You will be amazed that a lot of the time you will see that the image is a direct copy from another site. This proves that the admin is lying.

#4 Ask the Admin for as much personal information as possible. Also, check out all the information he/she provides. If he/she gives a phone number, then give them a call. If an address is given, then check it out for authenticity by looking at online phonebooks, and other databases. The more information that is available, the less likely it is that the admin will take the chance of scamming hundreds of people out of their investments. It makes sense to email the admin and ask some questions such as: where are you located, how long have you been around, and how do you make your returns. Then compare this information with found one. The common answers you will receive are United States, 2 Years, and Forex trading. Usually if these are the answers the admin is lying to you. About 75% of all new HYIPs claim that they have been paying members offline for over a year. 99.9999% of the time this is a lie. If an investing firm is able to deal with members offline for 2 years, there usually is no need to go online with their business.

All in all, if you follow these steps you will likely be saving yourself a descent amount of money in the long run. They improve your chances of walking away with profits. This tips are not complete list. Full one of golden HYIP rules collected on http://thehyips.net/lessons/.




Digg!

Proper Analysis Of The Forex Chart

In all media references, you may have heard about Foreign Exchange. Still, a lot of people have little idea when it comes to forex trading, especially reading the forex chart. People seldom realize its importance because they probably have not participated in it.

But it is actually quite easy to understand the forex chart, as long as you know what to look for. There are essentially two basic approaches for buying and selling currencies and this is where the understanding of a forex chart comes in.

First off is the Fundamental Analysis approach. This approach doesn? depend on forex charts at all. Instead, it uses economic and political factors to establish trades. Charts are essentially used just for reference regarding exiting and entering trades. The other approach is the Technical Analysis approach. This approach, meanwhile, tries to forecast the direction of prices by studying historical price movement on a particular chart. Technical analysts observe the relation between price and time.

To know how currencies are related to one another is very important. A forex chart always shows to your RIGHT, the value of the currency so one can buy a unit of the currency found to the LEFT. Recorded horizontally, time will be found somewhere at the chart? bottom alongside the price scale to the right. Price scale always stands for the currency to the east in the forward slash.

The most popular way of observing price or time movement on a forex chart is by means of the Japanese candle sticks. In order to watch price movement, one must pay attention to Japanese candle sticks. In case you don? know, a lot of traders depend on these sticks in making decisions in trading. A Japanese candle stick provides a way to examine price movement for a currency pair over a given timeframe. How much "time" each candle represents depends on the timeframe of the chart. If the chart below were a one-hour chart, each red and blue candle on it would represent the price activity for the currency pair over the course of one hour. If the chart were a daily chart, each candle would represent price activity for one day. It does not really matter what the timeframe is. You just have to remember that a candle represents price activity for the timeframe of whatever chart you are viewing.

The following are the basic parts and whatnot of a typical forex chart. The fat red section is the body of that candlestick. The lines protruding from the top and bottom are the upper and lower wicks. The bodies of the candles can be of varying sizes in a forex chart. There may also be times when there are no bodies in the chart at all. This is not something out of the ordinary. The same goes for the wicks. The wicks can be of varying sizes, or there just might not be any wicks at all. The length of the body and the wick is determined by the price range for that candle. Longer candles had more price movement during the time they were open. The very top of a candle? wick is the highest price for the currency pair, while the wick? bottom represents. When a candle is considered "bullish", this means there were more buyers than sellers during the time the candle was open.

Digg!

Forex Charts - Novice Trading Mistakes

Using Forex charts is like being a ships captain at sea: Your charts can help you navigate successfully to port or you can hit the rocks and drown - the choice is yours.

It’s the same with forex charts 95% of users drown – Let’s look at common errors that novice traders make and how to avoid them.

1. Predicting Price

No one can predict price movement and if you do - you are simply hoping levels will hold.

Do this and you will be wiped out quickly the market wont reward you for hoping or guessing.

If you want to win, act on the reality and that means - trading with price momentum AFTER a test of the level you are looking at.

Trade with momentum on your side and you are trading a fact and your odds of success are increased dramatically.

If you don’t use momentum indicators in your forex technical analysis learn what they are quickly.

2. Indicators Chosen and Misuse Of Them

A common error is to use lagging indicators to enter trades such as moving averages – This really leads on from the above: A

Always use momentum indicators to enter trades and only use lagging indicators to determine levels of support and resistance.

Many indicators traders use are useless good examples are:

Fibonacci levels and cycles - they again involve prediction and simply help wipe out equity.

3. Trading Invalid Data

Day traders are the worst offenders here. They are picking a short time frame where volatility is random they can’t calculate the odds - so they lose.

4. Systems that are to complicated

Some people devise very clever systems and lose.

Fact is - in forex trading you get your reward for being right – NOT Being clever.

Simple systems are best - as they are more robust and have fewer elements to break.

5. Not understanding volatility

Do you know what standard deviation of price is? If you don’t learn it backwards as this will help you determine everything from stop levels to targets for your trades and help you stay in winning trades longer and get better money management.

6. Your edge

Ask yourself this question:

What is your trading edge which will see you win when 95% of traders lose?

If you don’t know what it is – then find out or do more work on your forex trading strategy!

If you don’t know what your edge is kiss goodbye to your equity.

7. Following a method

Many traders have perfectly good methods but simply don’t have the discipline to follow them – if you dont have discipline you have no method in the first place.

If you want to enjoy currency trading success don’t make the mistakes above or you will lose.

Finally, there are a lot of vendors on the net promising you untold riches from their currency trading systems, for just a few hundred dollars – its not that easy so don’t buy them.

Trading is hard, but for the forex trader prepared to put in the work, the rewards can be immense.

Do your homework, be realistic and you could soon be making big returns from forex charts and executing some great trading signals for big profits.



Digg!

Forex Trading – Experiencing low Gains? Simple Tips to Get Triple Digit Gains

In forex trading the bulk of traders experience mediocre gains or lose - this applies to 95% of traders. However many traders are closer than they think to achieving bigger gains and the simple tips below can be incorporated in any forex trading strategy to increase returns – lets look at them.

1. Trade Less

One of the major problems that traders have is they equate trading a lot with getting more profits and they simply trade too much.

There is NO correlation between how often you trade and how much you are going to make - so the first point is cut your trading back to high odds trades only.

This means hitting the long term trends and turning points that yield the really big profits. The big trades only occur a few times each month in a currency so focus on these.

Forget day trading and scalping - the odds are not in your favour and you are guaranteed to lose so don’t try – Hit the big trends and milk them for all you can.

2. Risk More

If your trading a small account don’t diversify ( this is another word for diluting potential gains ) so risk more per trade.

If the odds are in your favour you need to increase your bet size.

You will hear a lot of traders saying you should risk 2% per trade! Well if you don’t risk much you won’t gain much – risk 10 – 20% per trade and more if you have a total conviction the odds are in your favour.

The enemy of successful forex trading is volatility and you need to have your stop far enough back that you are NOT clipped out by it and trail your stop slowly.

With reward goes risk and that’s a fact.

Most traders are so afraid of risk they create it, by having stops to close and losing.

They think they have a low risk but they may as well have not bothered trading in the first place!

3. Use Momentum

The biggest error traders make is trying to predict – If you do you will lose.

Why?

If you predict you are hoping a level will hold and the market is not going to reward you for hope.

You need to make sure that whenever you trade price momentum is on your side. This means missing a bit of the move – but as you can’t predict it’s the best you can do and it will still mean you can make a lot of money as:

You are trading the reality and always trading with the trend.

If you get 70% of the major trends you will make a lot of money.

Trading The Odds For Bigger Gains

If you like the action and the buzz of trading the above is not for you but if you are interested in increasing profits from your forex trading strategy then you will find the above is logical common sense.

You will be trading the best odds trades, risking amounts that can give you big rewards and timing your entries for maximum profit to lowest risk and this over time means big profits.



Digg!

Automated Trading Systems for Financial Markets and Recommendations for Their Usage

1. Introduction. Today using information and trading platforms has become a de facto requirement for successful trading in the financial markets. Their advantages as compared to conventional trading schemes include, for example, an unprecedented speed of processing and delivery of information to end users, the level of integration with data providers, and a wide array of built-in technical analysis instruments. At the same time, an investor opening an account with a brokerage firm simply cannot simultaneously manage the real-time analysis and trade in more than 4-6 financial instruments in several markets 24 hours 7 days a week. This brings about the need to employ automatic trading systems in the form of runtime environment with client and server parts and the programs to control these systems (scripts).

2. Comparative Analysis of the Problem Area. Various software components embrace the entire target sector of the market-from analytics and forecasting to complex trade and administration. The components of a trading platform provide its clients-brokers, dealers, traders, financial analysts and advisors-just the service they need at the very moment they need it, from immediate round-the-clock access to information of concern by means of mobile devices, to multi-move trading operations in the major client terminal. The software market offers a great many of information and trading platforms that differ, first of all, in the functionality of the client and server parts, and the list of services provided by the financial company once an account has been opened. However, only a relatively small number of software solutions include the components that automate trading.

2.1. MetaTrader4-based Solutions. One of the world's most widely used trade platform products is apparently MetaTrader4, developed by MetaQuotes Software Corporation for Forex market trading. The platform includes an integrated development environment (IDE) MetaEditor, intended for writing scripts in a programming language called MetaQuotes Language, or MQL4 for short. The language's syntax is based on the classic C language syntax, and the flow logic has not been significantly changed since the previous version of the platform that used MQL II as the programming language. The new automated trade framework is, undoubtedly, an evolution of the previous one. Both languages feature good functionality, with an optimum set of built-in trading and utility functions which is quite sufficient to implement the basic operations, and a facility to define custom functions to help implement non-standard ideas. From the programming point of view, MQL4 is much more convenient that its predecessor; this language is more oriented at professional programmers, while MQL II, in my opinion, will rather suit financial experts wishing to build trading programs (or trading advisors, in the MetaQuotes terminology) of their own.

2.2. Omega Research-based Solutions. In the New World, the vast majority of companies use the Omega Research platform developed by TradeStation Securities, Inc. This platform has long ago proven its worth at the worldwide market, and to date experts consider it to be the best system for technical analysis. The provided IDE called Omega Research PowerEditor is intended to create control programs in EasyLanguage (EL). The language's major advantage that strikes the eye is the easiness (hence is the name) of placing opening and closing orders. The corresponding program instructions can be written such as if we were formulating an order to our broker in the plain human language. In MQL4, for example, placing an order to open a position would involve specifying about a dozen of various parameters. In EasyLanguage, the same can be expressed in a short statement using a few words. Working with technical indicators is about that simple, too. But don't fall under an illusion: when creating these simple commands, language developers sacrificed the functionality and limited the possible ways of using a particular function, therefore effectively depriving the IDE users of the opportunity to accurately implement their own algorithms. TradeStation decided not to create extensive libraries of built-in trading and utility functions but to limit to only an essential set. As the platform advanced, the number of functions written by both in-house and third-party developers grew, and TradeStation simply included them as user-defined functions into the repository of its scripts. As a result, the functionality offered to users is not in the least scarcer than that of MetaQuotes product. PowerEditor provides a built-in dictionary that lets user search and get help on the available functions. Another handy tool worth mentioning is the strategy builder. Using the strategy builder, the user can easily create a basic algorithm for his or her trading program, and then modify and adjust it as necessary. EasyLanguage is an old-timer and pioneer in the field of creating automated trading systems for the stock market. It was the basis for the development of MQL II. EasyLanguage will be a good choice for programmers, but still a better one for financial experts more oriented at analyzing the market than trading.

2.3. ProTrader-based Solutions. Professional financial experts can choose the ProTrader2 or ProTraderFX platform as their working tool, depending on the type of the financial market-stock or Forex, respectively. The two platforms are developed and supported by PFSoft LLC. While featuring the specially developed ProTrader Language (PTL), the provided IDE named PTL Builder offers also the opportunity to create scripts in MQLII, MQL4 and EasyLanguage. For this, the text of the program is translated to a language-independent code. Therefore, at runtime it does not matter in which language the script was written. This technology does not only enable creating new scripts, but makes it possible to use freely the entire accumulated collection of scripts that many experienced traders possess. The main idea put into the new scripting language was to ensure maximum reliability and predictability of the scripts being run. The PTL language is built so as to minimize the possibility of making a mistake in the text of a user's script-the potentially dangerous points will be detected even before the script is tested or launched. Regardless of the programming language chosen, the platform works with verified managed code while running the script. This Microsoft-developed technology enables proper handling of errors that cannot be detected before the script is run. This means the program will not fail and will not perform any unwanted operations that might be due to critical errors or damage caused by another program, for which the account holder would eventually have to pay. The PTL Builder IDE will serve well both financial experts and programmers thanks to its support of different programming languages and provided tools such as tester and debugger.

3. Approaches for Creating Automated Trading Systems and Recommendations for Using Them. It hardly needs mentioning that choosing an information and trading platform should be taken with all seriousness. For those who plan to use an automated trading system in their business, below are some points I would recommend considering, based on my personal experience.

Choosing a Working Environment First of all, define the type of tasks the automated trading system is to perform. These could be:

Actual trading: opening and closing positions in selected instrument(s). Secondary support-type functions. These could include placing protective orders, creating and sending out reports of notifications. Analyzing the market with different technical analysis tools using your own algorithm. Now, after you have studied user comments on the Internet and perhaps consulted your broker, proceed to getting the feel of the products offered. I strongly encourage you not to just have a cursory look, but to test the system for a day of two, thankfully, most of the large companies will let you sign up for a demo account for testing. Pay attention to both the convenience of the IDE and the tools that go with it, and to reliability and security of the control programs created with the IDE.

4. Conclusion. In this article, I neither discuss any programming rules for creating the advisors, nor the specifics of writing scripts in a particular language. On these subjects, there are whole books written as well as a number of articles. My aim was to present several points which I think to be quite important but which have not been sufficiently covered in existing publications. So, are automated trading systems your ally or enemy? When used carefully and without hasty judgments, an automated trading system can facilitate the financial expert's work and bring in certain profits. But when used incorrectly, incompletely tested, or having settings changed frequently, the automated trading system can lose the money you entrust to it. Remember that an automated trading system is not going to do your job for you without any effort on your part. Use it to solve your existing problems and not add new ones.

Digg!

Social Bookmarking
Add to: Mr. Wong Add to: Webnews Add to: Icio Add to: Oneview Add to: Linkarena Add to: Favoriten Add to: Seekxl Add to: Kledy.de Add to: Social Bookmarking Tool Add to: BoniTrust Add to: Power Oldie Add to: Bookmarks.cc Add to: Favit Add to: Newskick Add to: Newsider Add to: Linksilo Add to: Readster Add to: Folkd Add to: Yigg Add to: Digg Add to: Del.icio.us Add to: Reddit Add to: Jumptags Add to: Upchuckr Add to: Simpy Add to: StumbleUpon Add to: Slashdot Add to: Netscape Add to: Furl Add to: Yahoo Add to: Spurl Add to: Google Add to: Blinklist Add to: Blogmarks Add to: Diigo Add to: Technorati Add to: Newsvine Add to: Blinkbits Add to: Ma.Gnolia Add to: Smarking Add to: Netvouz Information