By Admiral Markets
Dear traders,
Managing a trade is one of the most important aspects of trading, along with proper risk management and understanding of the charts (analysis/system).
Many traders fear entering a setup, which can be substantially reduced when you apply a balanced and active trade management method.
My approach basically uses four steps, in which I apply different management called loose and tight. The four steps I use are loose-tight-loose-tight depending on the phase of the trade.
On a side note, this article is a continuation of our previous blog posts
Insider Tips How to Select & Manage Trade Setups and 3 Live Trade Examples of How to Select and Filter Setups.
Free Reports:
The two main options for trade management are the so-called “passive” or “active” trade management. Here is the main difference:
Although passive trade management, also called set-and-forget, can work fine for many traders, I personally prefer an active management style. Why?
Simply because I can use the flow of the price and new candles to provide an updated analysis. The new information allows me to judge whether the setup is still worth trading or not.
The disadvantage of this style is one’s trading psychology, which can unintentionally cut winners short and let losses run. Our goal is in fact the exact opposite. I hope that today’s article will help with combatting this issue.
Not every trader can apply active trade management due to time constraints. If you do have lack of time, traders can consider trading a higher time frame so they can monitor the charts as needed.
I like to apply a mixed approach of how tight or loose I manage the setup:
Let’s take a look at an example.
A few days ago, I took a short setup on the NZD/JPY 4-hour chart. The trend was down as my long-term moving average indicates (orange is bearish angle).
The price then broke the support trend lines and also pierced through the Admiral Keltner indicator (
part of the MT4 plugin with 60+ features). This was a decent bearish breakout below the support trend line (dotted blue), and it triggered my short setup. I entered (red line) with a stop-loss above the high (dark red line).
Image: NZD/JPY 4-hour chart from 26 October to 16 November 2017
I was patient with the setup, even though the next candle was a bullish pinbar because of these two reasons:
The next candles price was moving sideways and building a correction. I saw this as a positive sign due to the bearish momentum (orange arrow) prior to the consolidation (blue box).
My patience was becoming thinner as the 6th and 7th candle started to form. I wanted to see a bearish breakout sooner rather than later.
Due to the range, I was anticipating a potential bullish bounce at the new support trend lines (green). I therefore moved the stop-loss (dark red arrow) to above the consolidation and reduced the risk on the setup to about 15% of the original risk.
Soon after, I moved the stop-loss, the price started to break lower and through the support trend lines. With little risk remaining on the setup and the price moving my way, I was in a position to be patient again. A useful tactic now is to let the price run and allow the setup to develop towards your target.
With the next bearish breakouts below the mini flag (purple line), I could further move the trail stop-loss to lock in profit now. Eventually, with this setup, my first target was hit as well (green box with green line).
As you can see with the above-mentioned example, my style is based on the loose-tight-loose-tight approach, which is a personal “recipe” for trade management developed over the years. I think it works best with how the market moves and will share more real live examples in next week’s article.
Wishing you happy trading,
Chris Svorcik
Follow
@ChrisSvorcik on Twitter for the latest market updates!
Connect with
Chris Svorcik on Facebook for more Forex and CFD analysis!
Article by Admiral Markets
Source: The Benefits of Active Trade Management in The Forex & CFD Markets
Admiral Markets is a leading online provider, offering trading with Forex and CFDs on stocks, indices, precious metals and energy.