Forex Money Management
Understanding Of Risk
The Forex market has a downside: you could
lose. But even the downside has an upside: you can’t lose
much.
If you pay attention to the principles of Forex money
management, you can control how much you lose. And even if you
lose half the time, in this market you can still make a
profit.
First of all, understand this: you will lose sometimes,
because in this or any market, everyone loses sooner or later.
No one is perfect and no one calls every trade perfectly. There
is no magic software or enchanted system that is right all the
time, no matter what the sales materials say. So be prepared,
before you ever begin trading, to lose some money.
But in the Forex market, you can only lose the price of the
lots you purchased. Although that amount varies from broker to
broker, in a mini account the average purchase price of one lot
is U.S. $100. And that’s it; $100 per trade is the
absolute maximum amount you can lose per trade.
If the trade goes downhill and the market moves against you,
even if you set no stop-loss at all, the market maker or your
broker will close it when the loss reaches $100. This is meant
to protect their investment, but it protects you, too, and the
equity in your account. That’s why, in the Forex market, you
will never get a margin call from your broker to cover a
questionable position.
But you don’t want to follow a losing trade all the way down
until the broker closes you out; you want to limit the amount
of money you lose. And by properly setting a stop and limit to
each order, you can do just that by controlling how far down
you follow a losing trade. You set the bail-out point, and when
the market reaches that point it automatically closes your
order.
Set your stop far enough away from the purchase price that
it’s not triggered by normal market jitters, but not so far
away that you lose more money than you’re prepared to risk. On
the charts, pay attention to the support and resistance points
if the market is range-bound.
Remember that even if the market breaks out of a range, the
previous low price is likely to become the new high price in a
bear market when prices are dropping; and the previous high
price often becomes the new low price in a bull market when
prices are rising. Setting your stop at these points is a wise
move.
On the other hand, by setting your limit at least twice as
far from the entry point as the stop, not only do you control
the amount you lose, you also control the amount you earn. And
when the trade goes your way, you earn more than twice the
amount that you lose when it doesn’t.
So even if you’re only right half the time, with proper
money management techniques that’s all you need to make a
profit in the Forex market.
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