How To Be In The 10% of Successful Forex Traders

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We’ve all heard that only about 10% of people make it in the trading business, so how do they do it? What is their mindset like, what is their trading process and routine like? What are they doing that you are not? In today’s lesson, I am going to give you some insight into these questions that will hopefully be the catalyst for a significant improvement in your trading performance.

Lower your trade frequency

How frequently are you trading? Once a week? Three times a week? Twenty times a week? Maybe it’s so frequently you literally have no idea? The odds are, that if you are not in the 10% of consistently successful traders you are probably trading far too frequently.
I know that for me personally, the biggest ‘ah ha’ moment in my trading career was when I realized that I could dramatically improve my trading results by simply being more patient; by waiting for only high-probability ‘absolutely obvious’ trading opportunities.

Many beginning and struggling traders do not realize that trading less often will typically increase their overall profit factor, and the more patient and precise you are with your trades, the more control you have over your trading and that means you can ultimately extract more money from the market. One thing the 10% of successful traders typically do that you are not doing, is back themselves and go in ‘hard’ when they spot one of the high-probability trade signals or events they’ve been waiting so patiently for. They typically are not using some silly risk model like the 2% risk model, they are instead focused on risk reward and dollars risk vs. dollars gained.
Understanding simple math will show you that making more trades will increase your error rate and decrease your overall profit factor. For an example of this, checkout my article on low-frequency vs. high-frequency trading. Being a more patient and precise trader not only means you’ll be eliminating a lot of low-probability / losing trades, but with that also comes obvious psychological benefits.

Remember that all the other traders are your opponents

In order to win at trading, you need to outsmart and out-think your opponents (other traders). Each trade takes careful planning, and if you are cutting corners or looking for ‘short-cuts’ or even just being lazy, I promise you that somewhere some other trader is not. You need to be sure you’re doing everything you can to put the trading probabilities in your favor, this is the only way you can ‘outsmart’ and preempt your opponent, because I can guarantee you the approximate 90% of losing traders are NOT doing everything they can to put the trading probabilities in their favor.
It’s often a game where the contrarian trader (person who does the opposite to what feels natural or seems logical) will make all the money and consistently win. So, the next time you think something is what it seems, have another look, because it’s probably not what it seems at all. The market is set up to deceive novice traders, be mindful of this when making decisions. Always look at things from your opponents point of view, as he is betting in the opposite direction that you are…remember there is always somebody on the opposite side of your trade, wanting the market to go in the opposite direction and having equally strong convictions in their trade as you have in yours. Try to put yourself in their shoes and understand why your opponent might have that alternate view, weigh all the possibilities before committing to your view or trade and see if it still makes sense, if it does then trust yourself and proceed.

If you don’t love the markets, you won’t make money

i love tradingAll great traders love the markets and love trading, it should never be a chore to look at charts or find trades, and you should only be in this profession if you have 100% true passion for financial markets and trading in general. I have never met a successful trader that was not obsessed with the markets and absolutely loved what he/she was doing. They live for this stuff, it is part of them, and if you want to be in the 10% of successful traders it needs to be a part of you too.

Incorrect stop loss placement can destroy you

A very important factor in your long-term success as a trader is CORRECT stop loss placement. Whilst stop losses are a necessary risk management tool, they are also the reason a trader gets stopped out of a trade for a loss; because there stop loss gets hit.  Many traders misplace their stop losses by placing them at the wrong levels, and they are often too wide or too tight.
Stops can’t just be placed randomly nor placed based on the position size you want to trade, they need to make sense and be in the context of the price action trade signal / setup and also in the context of the current market dynamics. I won’t get into detail here, but as a general guide, most traders place stops arbitrarily and don’t place them at logical areas of the chart with any real though behind them. This will destroy even the greatest trader with the best analysis skills. There is more in my course about stop placement for various trade setups…

The market will always go further than you think

Great trends are often self-fulfilling, meaning they tend to continue higher or lower, often just by the very fact that the longer they persist the more traders jump on-board, until the very weakest hands are on-board right before the trend comes crashing to an end.
People like to bet against trends for a variety of reasons; arrogance from wanting to pick the top or bottom, or believing something like: ‘what goes up must come down’ or ‘what goes down must come up’. This is a ridiculous thing to believe, because it’s obvious from looking at any price chart that markets simply don’t behave like that, yet traders seem to never learn because most of them continue to fight what is logical and obvious in the market.
If a market is trending and moving in one direction for a sustained period, the probability is obviously that it will continue in that direction until it has clearly ended. However, due to their emotions as well as the tendency to over-analyze the market, most traders always try to fight this probability.
Ever seen a chart that is moving up in one direction very quickly and just when you think it’s about to swing back and retrace, it starts moving up or down yet again? This is a self-fulfilling concept, in that the longer a trend goes the more momentum it has and the more people jump on-board, until finally the last and least experienced traders jump in right when the trend is coming to end. The amateurs and ‘worst’ traders we shall say, tend to jump in right as trends are ending because it’s at this point that they are feeling the fear of “missing out” on the move…because it has come so far and looks so good…but this usually about when it’s ready to end.
As markets trend, they weed out stop losses and create position liquidation or position covering that pushes the trend further, it’s a natural phenomenon that contributes to the self-fulfilling aspect of trends. In bull markets, when a market makes a new high consistently, every day a large heard of bearish traders are getting stopped out of short positions and liquidating, which fuels yet more buying.
Again, going back to the contrarian concept…if you think the market is ‘too high’ or has gone ‘too far’…chances are it will actually keep going further…so more often than not, try to avoid betting against a freight train that is headed in one direction. The only sure-fire way to know a trend has ended is when the new direction trend is underway.

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