First Steps In Forex Trading
The Basics of the Forex Market
There’s so much information about Forex trading online that
it’s understandable for the beginner forex trader to feel
overwhelmed. Here are some guidelines on how to get started in
the Forex market.
First of all, study. Read
everything you can find on the basics of the Forex market,
starting with these articles from our website and continuing
with whatever else you can find. With all the free
information about the Forex market currently available
online, you shouldn’t have to purchase anything at this
stage.
When the data makes sense to you, choose a forex broker.
This decision should be based on your trading needs. If money
is going to be tight, find a broker that offers a micro trading
account, so you don’t blow your entire trading budget in the
first week.
Also, make certain there are no hidden fees. If you’re
trading on a small account, it would be inconvenient, to say
the least, if your entire monthly profit was eaten up by a
maintenance charge.
When you’ve found the perfect forex brokerage, open a demo
account with them. This gives you access to their live feed,
with up-to-the-second price quotes and charts and your choice
of indicators, and his economic calendar and knowledge
base.
Of course, with all this fresh information, you’ll want to
read it, too. Whilst studying your forex course, get to
know the brokerage’s online forex trading platform. You should
be able to open the forex chart of the currency pair that
interests you, add and remove indicators, change the time frame
of the chart and the parameters of the indicators, and use the
graphic interface to draw trend lines. You should also be able
to open market and entry orders, add and change stops and
limits, manage a trailing stop, and close a trade quickly
should the market be moving against you.
Then paper trade using the technique of your choice. Pick
one currency pair for in-depth study; many people choose the
EUR/USD or GBP/USD, because their volatility creates a lot of
trading opportunities. But be aware that the best trading
opportunities will be during the hours that market is open; for
the European markets, that’s five to seven hours before the
United States, depending upon your time zone. Getting up at
three in the morning to watch charts can get old fast,
especially with a job or family. If that’s the case, consider
working with the USD/JPY, the Japanese yen, as Tokyo’s trading
hours begin during our evening.
Watch the chart of your selected currency pair for the
parameters that signal a trade using your technique. Remember
to start with the long-term charts before moving to the
short-term. When it seems right to you, enter the trade.
Please note that paper trading doesn’t involve the
level of emotional discomfort you get when real money is
involved. In that sense, it’s not realistic, but it will teach
you the mechanics of trading in the Forex market.
Important: Don’t quit paper trading until
you reach the number of pips you’ve set as your goal more often
than not. This is a very important step; if you quit paper
trading too soon, you won’t know enough to trade successfully
in the “real world” of the Forex market.
When you do deposit funds into your brokerage account and
begin trading with real money, start small to give yourself a
chance to adjust to that added stress. Don’t increase the
stakes by adding additional lots or by stepping up to a larger
account until you’ve learned to adjust for your emotions and
again become an efficient trader.
When you feel comfortable with these simpler techniques, go
on to study Fibonacci retracements, Bollinger bands,
candlestick chart patterns, and the Elliott wave theory.
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