- Don’t manage every position aggressively
This came into my approach from the SNB floor set on the Swiss Franc in 2011. I had built up a beautiful position; I knew I was on the right side of the trade (short EUR/CHF, and short USD/CHF), and I was certain that the fundamentals, the techs, everything lined up in my direction.
As CHF kept getting stronger, I kept adding to my position. And then, Phillip Hildebrand announced that the CHF was going to be pegged to the value of 1.20 against the Euro, and Francs instantly weakened - blowing up a large portion of the profits I had accumulated in the position. Since then, I’ve worked positions by taking profits as they move in my direction, and adding to the position on retracements as long as the trend is still there. And that’s worked beautifully for the most part. But this year, it caused me some complications…
We opened the year with a phenomenal trade in Japanese Yen. Much of this position reminded me of the 2011 Franc move… the fundamentals, the techs – they all lined up for Yen weakness. So, I built up positions in USDJPY, EURJPY, and GBPJPY – and went looking for the BIG move. I started the positions in Q4 2012, and as these trends continued to advance I added to my positions.
Then on February 25th, it looked like Silvio Berlusconi was going to be elected as Prime Minister of Italy, and the entire world got scared. Huge moves against my position showed me that the risk-off markets that were so prevalent over the last few years might come right back. I closed my positions to protect my profits, just as I hadn’t in 2011 when the SNB pegged the floor to the Franc.
And the day after, all of those trends came back. So, I resolved to manage positions more aggressively after 2011… and it seems that I’ve moved too far to the other end of the spectrum (managing too aggressively). This year – my resolution is to find the happy medium of trade and position management.
- Avoid the Noise
I trade with a lot of technical, so inherently I try to discount these noisy, often un-tradable events; but this year these issues were so pervasive that it was difficult to ignore them.
This may not have a directly negative impact on my p/l line – but it definitely affects my trading mentality, which will – eventually – hit my p/l line if left unchecked. In 2014, I want to avoid the noise even more than I have before, because the macroeconomic environment looks as if it’s about to get even more interesting, and I want to focus on what matters most: Price.
- Be more balanced
When I was 27 or 28 years old, it was easy to spend 16 hours a day with markets.
But a lot has changed for me over the last 5 years. I’ve moved to New York City, gotten engaged to the woman of my dreams, and I’ve acquired a great number of responsibilities—
at least more than I had when I was spending 16 hours a day trading.
What all of this has taught me is the more balance I have in my life, the more effective I am as a trader. I have perspective where previously I often suffered from myopia.
My fiancé and I have a date set to get married in the summer of 2014, so my most important goal for this year is to be a more balanced, well-rounded man. Trading is an amazing part of my life. Even when it’s bad (when I have a losing day or week); it’s good.
But by doing nothing but trading, I see diminishing marginal returns; and at some points I even see denigration in returns. So, my big goal for this year is to be a more balanced man, which should equate to a more effective trader.
James Stanley is an Active Trader, and Trading Instructor at DailyFX. James began trading equities and options in 1999 during one of the greatest bull markets of all-time. As the tech boom became the tech bust, James hybridized his short-term trading approach to include Swing-Trading, and Algorithmic system design. James has further developed and refined his approach while working for some of the largest banks and brokerage houses in the United States. James is graduate of Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD: US Dollar to remain pressured until uncertainty fog dissipates Premium
The EUR/USD pair lost additional ground in the first week of February, settling at around 1.1820. The reversal lost momentum after the pair peaked at 1.2082 in January, its highest since mid-2021.
Gold: Volatility persists in commodity space Premium
After losing more than 8% to end the previous week, Gold (XAU/USD) remained under heavy selling pressure on Monday and dropped toward $4,400. Although XAU/USD staged a decisive rebound afterward, it failed to stabilize above $5,000.
GBP/USD: Pound Sterling tests key support ahead of a big week Premium
The Pound Sterling (GBP) changed course against the US Dollar (USD), with GBP/USD giving up nearly 200 pips in a dramatic correction.
Bitcoin: The worst may be behind us
Bitcoin (BTC) price recovers slightly, trading at $65,000 at the time of writing on Friday, after reaching a low of $60,000 during the early Asian trading session. The Crypto King remained under pressure so far this week, posting three consecutive weeks of losses exceeding 30%.
Three scenarios for Japanese Yen ahead of snap election Premium
The latest polls point to a dominant win for the ruling bloc at the upcoming Japanese snap election. The larger Sanae Takaichi’s mandate, the more investors fear faster implementation of tax cuts and spending plans.
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