Forex Scalping
What Is Forex Scalping?
Forex scalping is a trading style used by forex traders to buy or sell a currency pair
and then hold it for a short period of time in an attempt to make a
profit. A forex scalper looks to make a large number of trades, taking
advantage of the small price movements which are common throughout the
day. While scalping attempts to capture small gains, such as 5 to 20 pips per trade, the profit on these trades can be magnified by increasing the position size.
Forex scalpers will typically hold trades for seconds to minutes, and open and close multiple positions within a single day.
Understanding Forex Scalping
Forex scalpers typically utilize leverage,
which allows for larger position sizes, so that a small change in price
equals a respectable profit. For example, a five pip profit in the EUR/USD on a $10,000 position (mini lot) is $5, while on a $100,000 position (standard lot) that five pip movement equates to $50.
Forex scalping strategies can be manual or automated. A manual system
involves a trader sitting at the computer screen, looking for signals
and interpreting whether to buy or sell. In an automated trading system, programs are used to tell the trading software when to buy and sell based on inputted parameters.
Scalping is popular in the moments after important data releases such
as the U.S. employment report and interest rate announcements. This is
because these types of high-impact news releases cause significant price
moves in a short amount of time. This is ideal for the scalper who
wants to get into and out of trades quickly. Due to the increased
volatility, position sizes may be scaled down to reduce risk. While a
trader may attempt to usually make 10 pips on a trade, in the aftermath
of a major news announcement they may be able to capture 20 pips or
more, for example.
Forex Scalping Risks
Forex scalping has risk, like all styles of trading. While profits
can accumulate quickly if lots of profitable trades are taken, losses
can also mount quickly if the trader doesn't know what they are doing or
are using a flawed system. Even if risking a small amount per trade,
taking many trades could mean a significant drawdown if many of those trades end up being losers.
Leverage and scaled up position sizes can also pose a risk. Assume a
trader has $10,000 in their account but is using a $100,000 position
size. This equates to 10:1 leverage. Assume the trader is willing to
risk five pips on each trade, and tries to get out when they have a 10
pip profit.
This is a viable system, but sometimes the trader won't be able to get out for a five pip loss. The market may gap through their stop loss point, and they end up getting out with a 20 pip loss. This scenario, known as slippage,
is common around major news announcements. Therefore, they lose four
times as much as they expected. A few of these slippage scenarios can
deplete an account quickly.
Forex scalpers require a trading account with small spreads, low
commissions, and the ability to post orders at any price. All these
features are typically only offered in ECN forex accounts. These are accounts that allow the trader to act like a market maker who can, if they choose, buy at the bid price and sell at the offer
price. Typical forex trading accounts require retail clients to buy at
the offer and sell at the bid. Typical forex accounts also discourage or
do not allow scalping.
If the spread or commissions are too high, or the price at which a
trader can trade is too restricted, the chances of the forex scalper
succeeding are greatly diminished.
Forex Scalping Strategies
There are countless trading strategies, although they will typically fall into a few broad categories.
Trend trading strategies involve entering in the direction of the trend, attempting to capture a profit if the trend continues.
Countertrend trading
is more difficult for a scalper, but involves taking a position in the
opposite direction of the trend. Such trades would be taken when the
trader expects the trend to reverse or pullback.
Range strategies identify support and resistance
areas and then the trader attempts to buy near support and sell near
resistance. The trader is profiting from oscillating price action.
Statistical traders look for patterns or anomalies that tend to occur
given specific conditions. This might include buying/selling and
holding the position for five minutes if a certain chart pattern appears
at a certain time of day, for example. Statistical forex scalping
strategies are often based on time, price, day of the week, or chart
patterns.
An Example of Scalping the EUR/USD
Assume a forex scalper trades the EUR/USD using a trend trading
strategy. They identify the recent trend, wait for a pullback, and then
buy when the price starts moving back in the trending direction.
Depending on volatility, the trader typically risks four pips and
takes profit at eight pips. The reward is twice the risk, which is a
favorable risk/reward.
If volatility is higher than usual, the trader will risk more pips, and
try to make a larger profit, but the position size will be smaller than
with the four pip stop loss.
Assume the trader has a $10,000 account and is willing to risk 0.5%
of their account per trade. That means they can lose $50 per trade. They
are risking four pips. Each standard lot ($100,000) equates to $10 in
profit or loss per pip. Since the trader is risking four pips, they can
trade 1.25 standard lots ($50 / (4 pips x $10)). If they lose four pips
on 1.25 standard lots, they will lose $50 which is their maximum risk
per trade. Their profit is double, so if they make eight pips, they will
earn $100.
The account has $10,000 in it, yet they are using a $100,000 position size. This is 10:1 leverage.
The following chart shows three trades, based on the recent trend
direction. The first trade is a winner for eight pips, or $100. The
second trade is a loss for four pips or $50. The next two trades are
winners for eight pips, or $100 each.
The overall profit for the day is three winners ($300) minus one
loser ($50), or $250. On a $10,000 account that is a 2.5% return for the
day. This shows the compounding
power of scalping. On the flip side, finding winning trades isn't easy,
and even with risking 0.5% of the account per trade, if the trader
doesn't have a sound method, losses can mount quickly.
The trades shown are for demonstration purposes only. (For related reading, see "The Ins and Outs of Forex Scalping")
Komentar
Posting Komentar