Tag Archive for: day trading

What’s Inside?

  • What are some forex day trading strategies you can use?
  • Do you recommend any rules for day trading forex?
  • Will I need particular skills to day trade the forex market?

A Personal Note From Me:

chris-capre-profitable-trader-2ndskiesforex

I’ve never been a trader who could only trade higher time frames, or only lower time frames. Technically I could, and I’ve had to depending upon where I live in the world + what time zone I’m in.

But when it comes to making money trading, you have to do what is most natural to how you think and perform. What I realized about myself 15 years ago while working as an FX broker, was that my mind likes to be active. My mind performs best when I’m be working on both short term and long term activities.

I also feel like having both skills gives me way more options and opportunities to pull money out of the market.

My suggestion for you is to find that which is most natural to your every day thinking, mindset and skill sets. For some of you, it will be day trading only. For many others, it will be swing trading or position trading on the higher time frames. And for a smaller portion of you, that will be a marriage between the two.

For those of you that are naturally attracted to day trading, or are interested in learning the skills and upsides to day trading – read on.

The Benefits of Day Trading

A healthy way to look at day trading is examine a parallel profession and skill – that of online poker players.

Trading and online poker have skill-sets which mirror each other incredibly (risk management, controlling your emotions, calculating probabilities, etc). Hence, if you have good skills as a trader, you most likely have a solid set of skills to make money in online poker (and vice versa).

I’ve spent many a nights with my trading friends playing poker in casinos and various private tables.  75% of the time, we make money. The last time I went into a casino poker room with another trading friend of mine, I doubled my buy in, and a lot of that success had to do with my skills as a profitable trader.

When you look at online poker players, you’ll almost never see a poker player only playing one table. Over 80% of them are playing multiple tables at the same time, with some I know handling 16 tables at a time for hours on end.

Now you have to ask yourself: why do online poker players prefer to play more tables vs less or just one?

The answer is simple: MATH! If I am a good poker player, and have an edge on one table, then if I can repeat the edge across multiple tables, I can make more money.

The same goes for day trading. If you have a profitable trading strategy and skill set, the more trades you make, the more money you make as that edge plays out more x’s per day.

More trades (technically) =’s more opportunities to make money. This is one advantage that day trading has over swing trading.

Another major advantage of day trading is you get more feedback faster.

The more trades you make with a particular strategy, the faster you learn the in’s and out’s of that strategy, such as what environments it works best in, and which ones it performs poorly with.

By also exposing yourself to a lot more candles, price action context and structures, you’re creating a more abundant data set to digest, memorize and work with.

I could list a whole host of other benefits (such as not having over-night risk), but for now, I’m guessing you can see why day trading has some serious benefits.

For now, let’s jump into a few tips, tactics and strategies for day trading.

Day Trading Tip #1: Do Not Trade Against These!

The first core model I use to trade price action context on any time frame, particularly day trading, is impulsive and corrective price action.

impulsive-and-corrective-price-action

For those of you that are new to trading impulsive and corrective price action, click on that link above.

Now assuming you know what an impulsive move is in the forex market, I’d like you to do an experiment:

Look at all your losses, particularly the ones where you opened the trade, and it pretty much went negative right off the bat and ended up a loss.

When you look at the charts leading up to your entry, and how the price action acted after, count how many of them you were trading against impulsive moves. I’m guessing in the majority of those losses you were trading against them.

If you find this to be true, then you want to be trading with impulsive moves as much as possible when day trading.

Day Trading Tip #2: Always Trade With A Minimum Risk vs Reward Over This

In one of my latest articles, I talked about 6 trading statistics you should know if you want to make money trading. One of them was from a study done by FXCM, whereby they noticed traders who had a 1:1 risk to reward ratio were 300% more likely to profit vs traders who used negative risk:reward ratios.

risk-reward-profit-stats fxcm

This statistic applied to all time frames and types of traders (day and swing traders). Because you are more active day trading, you’re applying your edge more often in the forex market. Hence you have to be super on point in making sure the math works out in your favor as you’re trading at a faster pace, and thus exposing your equity more often to risk.

Hence, use nothing less than a 1:1 risk to reward ratio when day trading.

Day Trading Tip #3: Limit The Number of Instruments You Trade

Because of the time sensitive nature of day trading, every calculation, analysis and decision you make must be done faster. This increased speed of processing in your brain also taxes your working memory and thus increases your cognitive load.

To reduce this strain on your brain, I’d suggest day trading a few instruments or forex pairs, possibly even one.

If you’re day trading only the forex market, I’d suggest one major pair, one minor pair, and one exotic to add some extra spice 🙂

Ideally you are choosing forex pairs which are most correlated with your region and time of day. So USD and European currencies if you are in the UK/Europe/North America. For Asia/Australia/New Zealand, I’d suggest at least 2 currencies from your region (JPY, AUD, NZD, CNY, SGD, KRW) and minimally one USD pair.

If you’re day trading stocks, I’d recommend one or two indices from your region, and at least one consistently volatile stock from your region. You can also look for an ETF as well.

If you’re day trading commodities, I’d recommend a natural resource, such as WTI/Nat Gas, one precious metal, such as gold/silver, and one agricultural product.

The number of instruments isn’t fixed. A good rule of thumb is to only trade as many instruments as you can mentally handle. If it’s too taxing and stressing on your brain, you’re likely trading too much.

Day Trading Tip #4: Have A Max Risk Profile

I’m guessing many of you struggling traders have experienced how easy it is to get carried away with risk, particularly when you’re on a winning a losing streak. To keep guardrails in place so you don’t start over-trading and going off the reservation, I recommend having a max risk profile as a day trader.

A max risk profile is simply creating a line in the sand that once your losses for that day, week, month are passed, you stop trading for the time being and regroup.

If you could only have one max risk profile, it would be a max risk per month. If you are open to having two of them (my minimum suggestion), it would be a max risk per month and a max risk per trade. A more robust risk profile would be to have a max risk per month/per day/per trade.

I always recommend risking a fixed % per trade, and generally do not recommend more than 1% per trade (in the beginning, ideally <1% per trade). Per day, I’d recommend no more than 4-5R, so 4-5x your max risk per trade. Per month I’d recommend a max risk of 9.9% per month.

Why 9.9%? Because the statistics show that for every double digit draw-down you have per month, your chances of recovering your account just back to break even decline exponentially.

Having max risk profiles will protect you long term and keep you in the game when things are tough so you can bounce back and get to profitability.

Day Trading Tip #5: Plan This Ahead of Time

As a day trader, you’re often using a lot of working memory + brain processing power in your pre-frontal cortex for all the decisions/calculations/analysis you have to do in real time with alacrity.

This can increase the cognitive load and thus tax your brain, leaving you with little bandwidth to make important trading decisions in real time.

Because of this, I’d recommend planning these two things ahead of time:

#1: Plan your trades ahead of time. This includes doing your price action context analysis ahead of time, along with identifying your key support and resistance levels and the types of trade setups you want to take ahead of time.

Of course, we’re always flexible to take new trades should they emerge, but we want to plan as much of this ahead of time so when it comes time to trade, you’re already prepared and can just pull the trigger.

#2: Plan If/Than scenarios ahead of time. Some examples of if/than scenarios you can prepare for are:

-your trend direction gets reversed
-you get stopped out and the market is showing a reversal setup
-the market breaks a key level you think will hold

By planning these ahead of time, you avoid being married to one side of the market, thus remaining flexible so you can take advantage should the market change directions when you least expect it.

Day Trading Tip #6: A Good Strategy Can Be As Simple As Targeting 15-20 Pips A Day

Since you are wanting to day trade, it’s important you are going for targets which can easily be hit within a day’s session, or ideally a 24hr period. What this translates to is going after targets which are consistently hit on any given day.

Thus whatever instrument you trade, whether it be forex, stocks, indices, or whatever, that the average daily movement and volatility for that instrument makes it easy for you to find trades that will hit those targets.

A simple way to do this is to pull up the ATR indicator on a daily forex chart for your instrument and set it to 5. This will calculate the average daily range per day over a 5 day period.

In the example below for the EURUSD, the 5 period ATR on the daily chart is 50 pips with a high of 69 pips over this year and a low of 30 pips.

eurusd daily atr 2ndskiesforex

What this means is, if you want to day trade the EURUSD pair, you could simply go for 15-20 pips a day which should be a relatively easy target to hit.

Obviously you’re going to need a strategy to help you capture those 15-20 pips per day, and we teach many strategies like this in our price action course. But as you can see, this is a relatively workable target to go for each day with the right price action skills in place.

In Closing

There is so much more I could talk about when it comes to day trading forex, or any market for that matter. But the key points to remember are:

  1. Day trading has some major advantages over swing trading when it comes to multiplying your income
  2. Day trading also has some specific challenges swing traders do not face with the time pressures involved
  3. Only day trade if it suits you personally and feels natural
  4. Don’t trade against impulsive moves whenever possible, and make sure to plan out ahead of time as much as possible
  5. Create a proper risk profile to protect you when you’re not performing at your best
  6. Go for reasonable targets that can be achieved easily within a day

If you learn to do this above well, along with all the tips and tactics I mentioned above, with the right training and mindset, you can find it a very profitable endeavor.

Some of my best trades were day trades that took no less than a couple hours to hit their profit targets. It’s a nice and rewarding feeling to grind out several profitable day trades over a few hours, then go out and enjoy the rest of your day as you made your money.

If you’re interested in learning more about day trading forex (or any market for that matter), in our price action course, we teach strategies and skills to day trade on any instrument, time frame or environment.

My hope with this article is that you who are naturally inclined to day trade find it much more workable and profitable through the methods and tactics we shared above.

With that being said, please make sure to leave your comments and feedback as we’re always looking to hear from our community.

Until then – good health and success to you in trading and life.

Watch this video to learn 5 necessary tips for day trading stocks.

Day trading stocks can offer you a lot of opportunities for profit, but they also require strong trading skills, quick thinking and the right tools to make money trading.

In this video, I share with you 5 tips for day trading stocks that I use personally and will help you in making money day trading stocks.

Read more

Volume is a critical tool and indicator for trading stocks. You have to learn how to trade using volume so you can avoid false breakouts, find the best breakouts, and see how volume can support or negate your trading ideas.

In today’s stock trading video, I’m going to share with you how to day trade stocks using volume. I’m also going to discuss how volume gives you a key piece of information about order flow, and how learning to read the order flow in the price action and volume can improve your trading performance.

Read more

Less than two weeks ago, a course member asked me the following question (click to enlarge):

2008 crash

Here was my response:

“You have to be prepared for bigger pullbacks & volatility than usual. You have to keep staying short till you see a broad base of instruments bottoming and showing a transition in the price action and order flow” – from my members coaching session Feb 14th.

This week, we got a taste of this volatility, and there is a decent chance the selling + volatility may just be starting. Hundreds of my clients and friends have been asking me, “Is the stock market about to crash?”

In this trading article, I’m going to discuss the coronavirus, the increase in volatility, what’s happening the financial markets, is the stock market going to crash and how I’m trading it.

So grab the popcorn and a good beer as we’re going to get into the thick and thin of it.

Coronavirus + Volatility = Panic!

Let’s get into some stats around this week’s incredible sell off in the global markets. This week’s drop in the S&P 500 was the fastest 10%+ drop IN HISTORY!

Exhibit A: The Fastest Correction (10%) in History (S&P 500)

fastest correction S&P 500 in history 2ndskiesforex

In the last 7 trading days starting with February 20 – 28 (from open to close) lost 440 points shedding 12.9% while global markets puked $5 trillion in market cap.

Translation: In the last 7 days, we lost the GDP of the UK & India combined! (source: investopedia)

Also of note, the fastest and second fastest 10% declines (from peak) have happened within this decade.

Of all the decades going back to the 40’s, the 60’s and 90’s had 5 of the fastest 10% corrections in history. This decade is in 2nd place with 4 of them (see below)

fastest corrections by decade 2ndskiesforex

Also of note is 3 of the last 5 of these fast 10% corrections have happened in the last two decades and 7 out of 10 in the last 30 years.

Translation: these corrections are happening faster in more recent history than before.

What is also important to note is how low volatility was in the S&P 500 until the corona virus started to become prevalent in the markets (see below).

volatility ranges S&P 500 2ndskiesforex

We had 71 days of super low volatility and many 5 day stretches where the markets never dropped more than .5% (green box)

Then we had a period of 17 days with mildly increasing volatility when the coronavirus was becoming more of an issue.

This culminated in a 7 day explosion of volatility last week erasing months of gains in a flash.

This is one of the most important trading lessons I’ve learned over 20 years. That markets can and often do sell off faster than the run ups.

The reason why this can happen has to do with market psychology and behavioral finance.

In a long bull trend, the general emotions are complacency, confidence and greed. This has to do with simple biology.

We are wired as humans to react more rapidly to stimuli which threaten our existence. Slow non-volatile bull markets don’t threaten us, so we don’t often react with alacrity at a small sell off.

The emotions behind a bear market or extreme selloff is fear, worry and panic. Hence a sharp selloff and quick loss in our portfolio is threatening, thus leading to fast reactions (SELL & SELL EVERYTHING!).

This is why markets can sell off far more quickly then on the way up.

There is a reason why the fastest week-on-week changes in the S&P 500 (%) are during crashes vs bull runs (see below).

fastest week on week moves S&P 500 2ndskiesforex

The big moves to the downside (week-on-week %) are simply larger and more frequent.

This also means big week-on-week changes create a feedback loop for panic selling to continue.

What this means for investors and traders is we make quicker trading decisions during bear vs bull markets.

Now in comparison to the 2008 financial crisis, the S&P 500 lost 58% from Oct 07’ – Mar of 09’ over a period of 525 days peak to trough (image below).

2008 sell off S&P 500 2ndskiesforex

We’ve already lost 12.9% (about one-fifth of the 08’ drop) in just 7 days!!!

And if we happen to get another 58% decline, we’ll be looking at an S&P 500 around 1400 by the time this is over.

Translation: this selloff has the potential to be one of the most rapid declines in history. And the speed at which we’ve lost so much so fast last week could create more selling from investors globally.

Going from a low volatility environment to a high one this quickly will create stronger biological reactions, hence the formula Coronavirus + Volatility = Panic!

Is The Stock Market Going to Crash?

Short answer: I don’t know. I don’t think we’re there yet.

We’ve had many 12+% declines in recent history (4 total) since 2016 with a 12.33% decline (Jan 18’) being the smallest and a 21.46% decline the largest (Nov 18’).

recent declines S&P 500 2ndskiesforex

I think once we start seeing a 25% drop or larger, investors along with major institutions (Fed, Trump Admin) will start to really panic.

Combine this with the fact we’re in an election year and the last thing Trump wants is a stock market collapse.

In some sense, it’s even a bigger issue for Trump as he campaigned on his business skills, and has proudly taken credit many times about this being the “Greatest Economy Ever” pretty much anytime we’ve posted all time highs over the last few years.

Should we get a strong selloff next week and start reaching the -20% levels, expect a govt stimulus to come which (depending upon how its setup) could create a short term strong bounce.

But here’s the kicker…

Let’s say the coronavirus continues to spread from country to country with more and more population centers becoming infected.

Is a Fed rate cut going to inspire you to travel? No.

Will a Fed rate cut give you the confidence to go out in public and risk getting infected with a potentially deadly disease? No.

And this is how this threat to the markets is different than the 2008 great financial crisis.

The 08’ crisis was an economic one (over-leveraged exposure to housing) which was able to spread globally.

The coronavirus isn’t an economic issue, it’s a biological and containment issue.

Economic policies will be more effective (like in 08’) simply because it was more of a 1-1 relationship (economic problem & an economic solution).

However, economic stimulus isn’t going to change a biological health scare because the relationship isn’t a 1-1 match.

My sense tells me economic stimulus packages will be far less effective vs the actual biological and crisis management of the issue.

That is where IMO traders and investors globally should be looking for signs of a turnaround should this selloff get worse.

We haven’t gotten to the ‘Oh-Sh!t’ levels yet. Once we start to get into a 20-25% decline, then I think you’ll start to see real panic in the markets.

How to Trade & Protect Your Long Term Investments During This Time?

I wouldn’t think of buying anything till at least we see the market open this week.

How the Asian markets open will likely give a strong tell as to how the week will go.

Hence before you go rushing into what you think might be ‘cheap’ prices compared to recent history, wait to see how the market opens.

We’ve only had a few instances of the markets selling off for 3 weeks in a row since Dec 15’ (5 total) and none of them shed this much value.

For now, there are various ways you can protect your long term long term plays if you think there is more downside:

Trading Options

1) collect premium by selling calls on stocks you are holding long term

2) bear put spreads

3) buy outright puts on your long stock positions

Trading Forex

The currencies which have most benefited from this 7 day decline are JPY, CHF, EUR & USD while EM currencies suffered heavily (MXN, RUB, ZAR).

The JPY basket (JPY vs USD, EUR, GBP, CAD & AUD) gained 2.5% last week (image below).

jpy basket 2ndskiesforex

Meanwhile the EM basket (USD vs CNH, MXN, ZAR & TRY) lost 2.6% over the same period (image below).

em basket 2ndskiesforex

The EM currencies which suffered the most losses last week were MXN vs EUR (-9%), RUB vs EUR (-8.8%), RUB vs JPY (-9.5%), MXN vs JPY (-9.6%), CHF vs MXN (9.5%), & the CHF vs RUB (8.8%).

If the virus continues to spread, expect further capital to move into these safe haven currencies vs EM betas.

It’s important to note many of these currencies ran into some key support & resistance levels, rebounding a bit to end the week.

Forex currencies tend to overshoot key levels during major crisis, so if we see them blow past many of the current key support & resistance levels, we could be reaching all time highs or lows (EURZAR, USDRUB, USDMXN) on the quick.

I’ve been trading many of these pairs on the 5 minute charts trading intraday breakout setups with two positions.

I’d suggest using the first position to hit a medium term target while letting the second one run and capture as much alpha as possible till momentum changes manifest in the short term price action.

But this is only recommended if you are doing day trading.

Trading Stocks

If you feel an uncontrollable urge to buy stocks, I suggest the following plays:

Watch the market leaders who exhibited strength heading into the selloff and performed well on Friday. If they continue to exhibit strength, there may be a potential buy, but watch the price action:

1) Microsoft (MSFT) which gained 7.7% on Friday

2) Facebook (FB) which climbed 6% on Friday

3) Nvidia (NVDA) grabbing a 12.6% gain to end last week

nvidia stock trading 2ndskiesforex

4) If you don’t mind trading nano, micro and small caps, take a look at pharma stocks which have done well recently: NVAX +129% low to high last week, MRNA +96%, and for the truly brave micro cap trader CODX +591% last week low to high (big cajones required 😉)

Novavax (NVAX) chart below:

novavax stock trading 2ndskiesforex

1) Sell Airlines (who wants to fly to another country when there’s an outbreak?) – source: bloomberg

NOTE: A more targeted method would be going after airlines in countries where travel bans or warnings are issued.

sp500 airlines index 2ndskiesforex

2) Sell Hotels/Entertainment which is down 20% on the week (same reasons as above)

us hotels benchmark index 2ndskiesforex

There’s been a lot of profit taking in commodities, so I’d wait for a change in the short term price action context before getting long (gold and silver in particular).

Wrapping It All Up

Now is not the time to be listening to CNBC analysts, most of whom are not trading. Last week many were all calling stocks ‘cheap’ and in the process getting their a$$’s handed to them.

This is a time to be alert and nimble, using good risk management as the volatility moves on these instruments can wipe out weeks or months of gains if you’re not careful.

Hence trade smaller positions than your usual risk % per trade. Try more ‘proof of concept‘ trades where you put small feeler trades out, and if it progresses, then add on size.

I don’t think the stock market is at its ‘OH SH!T‘ moment yet, but we could get there fast.

I’ve traded now for 20 years and went through 2 major financial crisis (2001 dot.com bust & the 2008 great financial crisis).

The first one I didn’t know what I was doing and performed poorly.

The second one I learned my lesson and killed it.

Traders can make a lot of money if you’re smart and agile, defensive when you need to be and aggressive with precision.

But you’ll need mental toughness to manage your emotions and mindset during these periods.

Do that and you can make a killing. You may not see another time like this for years as its been over 12 since the GFC of 08′.

Hence, avail yourself of the opportunity, be patient, allow for more space in your stop losses due to the increased volatility, and trade with the most impulsive moves till you see changes in the price action and order flow across a broad base of instruments.

******

This was a monster article that took hours upon hours to write and publish. Please make sure to pay it forward by sharing it with others on social media and leaving your feedback below.

Until then, good luck trading and I’ll see you out there in the field.

There seems to be a ton of confusion on both sides regarding the Quality vs Quantity Argument when it comes to trading.  Being such an important subject for a trader, I have been wanting to write about this for some time so it’s time to put some of the myths, mis-information and confusion to bed here.

quality vs quantity in trading 2ndskiestrading.com

One of the big forex trading arguments going around has to do with ‘Quality vs Quantity‘, and it is often masked in the typical;

-Trading Higher Time Frames = More Accuracy

-Trading Smaller Time Frames Carry More Risk

-Anything Below The 1HR Charts is Just Noise

-Quality Trades Make More Money Than Quantity

In regards to the above statements, only one of them is true, but it is incomplete by itself and does not paint the whole picture.

Today’s article is here to dive into this subject, explore both sides of it, and talk about which of the two competing theories is correct.

Quality Is Better Than Quantity When It Comes To Trading
I know two groups of billion dollar business entities that would completely disagree with this argument. They would be Casino’s and HFT shops (High Frequency Trading).

Casinos often times (in the various games you can play there), only have a slight edge, often times 1-4%, meaning they are 51-56% likely to win at every play, with a 49-44% chance to lose.  This small edge might not seem like a lot, but played out over 1000’s of times a day, and it all adds up.

high frequency trading algos quantity vs quality 2ndskiestrading.com
HFT algos also take a similar approach.  They are not trying to make huge winners and let trades run for days. They are in anywhere from hours to minutes, perhaps seconds, or even nan0-seconds.  They make small trades for ultra small profit, but they do this hundreds of times a day, and make money year in year out.

These two things alone debunk the whole quality is better than quantity argument, as they are highly successful at what they do.  In 2011 alone, HFT firms made over $1.2B (yes, billion) in profits.  Not bad for having such an inferior trading style!

HFT methods simply use the mathematics and repetition of the edge to make profit.  It’s an edge – maybe not the easiest for a human trader, but an edge nonetheless, and it makes money.

The bottom line is, if you have an edge, the more times you can apply it with the same level of accuracy, the more the edge will play out in your favor.  And that leads to more profits.

quality vs quantity a comparison approach 2ndskiestrading.com

A Comparison Approach
To really see the numbers and a comparison approach, let’s take System A with 60% accuracy, trading 5x a month, risking 100 pips and targeting 200 pips.  Below is how the math works out;

5 trades over 12 months = 60 trades per year
60 trades x 60% accuracy = 36 winners and 24 losers
36 winners at 200 pips gained =  7200 pips gained
24 losers at 100 pips lost = 2400 pips lost
Total Profit =  +4800 pips

Now, lets take System B, which is the same as System A, but bring down the accuracy just 5%, assuming you will be less accurate trading the same system on a lower time frame.  Let’s have you trading 20x a month (~5x per week), risking 50 pips and targeting 100 pips (same ratio of risk to reward).  Here is how the math plays out below;

20 trades a month = 240 trades per year
240 trades at 55% accuracy =  132 winners and 108 losers
132 winners at 100 pips gained per trade =  13200 pips gained
108 losers at 50 pips lost per trade = 5400 pips lost
Total Profit = +7800 pips

Assuming you risked the same equity % per trade using System B – trading quantity over quality made more pips and profit.  Even if I make System A 15 % more accurate than System B, here is how the math plays out;

60 trades at 70% accuracy = 42 winners and 18 losers
42 winners at 200 pips gained per trade = 8400 pips gained
18 losers at 100 pips lost per trade = 1800 pips lost
Total Profit = +6600 pips

As you can see, even being 15% more accurate, System A still under-performs System B.  Only until you get to 77% accuracy will System A outperform System B.

So this whole argument that Quality over Quantity is mathematically false.

One of the key questions you should be asking yourself then is;

Can I be 77% accurate trading my system on the higher time frames?

If not, you may want to reconsider how to maximize your edge, which is all you are really doing in trading. But the fact is that trading on higher time frames will take longer to make money as you will have less signals in the market.

quality vs quantity key points 2ndskiestrading.com
Key Points
A few of the typical or vanilla counter-arguments to the quantity makes more than quality statements are;

1) Trading higher time frames is less stressful and is More Accurate

2) Anything below 1hr charts is just noise

3) Trading lower time frames causes you to over-trade and over-analyze

Of the above statements, only one is true to some degree (#1) , but again it is incomplete by itself and needs to be fully understood.  Let me break down each one so you can fully understand the differences.

Trading Higher Time Frames is Less Stressful and More Accurate:
Of all the statements, this is really the only one with some truth, and it has to do with the second part (being more accurate).

I have quantitatively tested various 1, 2 and 3 bar price action signals (over 24 in total), such as pin bars, inside bars, engulfing bars, 2-bar reversals, outside bars, and more across every time frame from the 1m to weekly.  Statistically, if you are just trading these patterns by themselves, they tend to be more accurate on time frames such as daily and 4hr strategies (along with the 1hr), then they do on say the 5m.

The reason for this is, a daily candle includes 24hrs of price action, therefore 24hrs of market sentiment and order flow, which is three sessions total.  This can have a lot of info as to how players are positioning themselves both intraday and daily.

Thus, with a greater amount of market sentiment over a longer period of time, you can trade some of these patterns with greater accuracy.

However, as we have seen above, greater accuracy does not always = more profits.  One thing should be noted though accuracy is not the same trading the often promoted NY Daily Close.

I have one system that on the NY Daily Close, on one pair, trades highly accurate, but another pair quite poorly.  If you have an idea as to why, write in a comment below, but the statistics and profitability are night and day, so NY Daily Close is not ideal for all systems, pairs and time frames, and in many cases, under-performs massively.

Thus to sum it up, trading the higher time frame ‘can’ lead to more accuracy.

However, the notion of trading the higher time frame is less stressful is not true, and really a matter of having a successful trading mindset.  Some people are more naturally wired to have a set and forget style of trading.  Others are better at managing small details, so trading a higher time frame would actually work against their natural mindset.

lower time frames is more stressful 2ndskiestrading.com

There is no one-size fits all, thus the key is to find what is most natural to you.

I would like to state generally, if I was starting with a new student, I would start them on a higher time frame as accuracy in the beginning is critical to the learning process.  This is exactly how it is in my archery training – in the beginning you start with a target close by, say 3-6 meters, and only after time do you move to targets farther away.

But the idea of lower time frames being more stressful is a matter of mindset, training and practice. Stress is based on how one perceives information and reacts to stimuli.  To some people, being bored is more stressful, and there are tons of studies that boredom can hugely interfere with the trading and learning process.  For an F1 driver, being stuck in traffic may feel like torture, but doing 150MPH may be joyful. Food for thought.

Anything below 1hr charts is just noise:

First off, this argument often comes from daily chart traders saying price action below the 1hr is just noise. Ironically, this same argument comes from 1hr chart traders who say the 1m time frame is just noise. Who is right, and is it just a matter of perspective?

The truth of the matter is, although there is a greater possibility to witness ‘noise‘ (price action that is the result of non-directional interest and order flow), on lower time frames, support and resistance levels work just the same.  They simply require a little tweaking.  But the bottom line is, order flow creates price action, and price action is simply information.

Using a recent example of a live intraday price action trade I did on Gold, take a look at the two charts below;

Exhibit A (4hr Time Frame Gold/USD)
price action quality vs quantity 2ndskiestrading.com exhibit a gold 4hr chart

Looking at the chart above, we can see three strong reactions to the $1685 level on Gold, all communicating strong buying interest at this level.

Now look at the chart below which is the third rejection on the 5m time frame.

Exhibit B (5m Time Frame Gold/USD)
price action pin bar + inside bar combo quality vs quantity 2ndskiestrading.com exhibit b gold 5m chart

Looking at the chart above, we can see the same strong reaction and buying interest off this level in the first wick.  But we can also see there are two high quality price action signals off this level, with a pin bar false break, along with an inside bar + pin bar combo.

I actually got long on this trade, and made over +1415 pips of profit just using pure price action on the 5m chart.

Does the price action at the bottom of this chart look like ‘noise‘ to you?

I don’t think so, and it shouldn’t.

Learning to filter out useful information and helpful information is just a matter of training and time.  But the idea anything below the 1hr chart is just ‘noise‘ is ridiculous and really a freshman understanding of price action.

Trading Lower Time Frames Causes You To Over-Trade and is Greater Risk:

Although there is some truth to this, it really is misleading.  If you analyze each bar, sure, you will be over-analyzing the charts, but this applies to any time frame.  In a choppy range, you are not watching every bar for clues, especially the bars in the middle of the range.

However, if you are marking your key levels on a higher time frame, and simply looking for signals at those levels, then the chances of you over-analyzing are slim.  It is really a question of trading and preparation- not a fact that you will over-analyze.

mind has neuro-plasticity 2ndskiestrading.com

The mind has neuro-plasticity to it and can learn almost any skill.  You can learn to filter out unimportant bars and price action on the chart – all it takes is a little practice.  Once you do, you wait for your key levels and signals, and get in without any extra analysis or stress.

The whole idea of doing less is better for you (or being lazy), I have already demonstrated, doesn’t make you more profitable.  Try this same logic to exercising, playing piano or hitting a golf ball, and tell me how that works out!

As to trading the lower time frames or intraday trading equaling greater risk, is a confusion.  Risk has nothing to do with the time frame.  Risk has to do with three things;

1) Position Sizing
2) Size of Stop Loss in Relation to Target
3) Accuracy

I can have a 3 pip stop (via position sizing) = more risk than a 500 pip stop.  I can also make more money with a 50 pip target and 20 pip stop (2.5:1 reward-risk ratio) than a 500 pip target and 250 pip stop (2:1 reward to risk ratio), with the same equity % at risk per trade.  So this notion that risk is > on lower time frames is mis-informed.

Does This Mean Quantity Is Better Than Quality?
This is the real question, and it comes down to edge, personality and availability.  If you are not available to trade more throughout the day, and have a full time job with only a few hours to view the charts, then I’d suggest trading the higher time frames.  However, if your personality is more suited to being more active, then trading 4-5x a month could be harmful to your learning process.   So remember trading rule # 1 – know thyself when it comes to trading, and find a system, time frame and style that best suits you.

trading rule #1 know thyself 2ndskiestrading.com

And we always have to consider our edge.  If we trade the daily time frame at 60% accuracy, and the 4hr or 1hr time frames more often with slightly less accurately, do the math and see how it works out.  If it’s more profitable trading more often with slightly less accuracy, then do it, as long as it doesn’t throw off your life or health.

But the bottom line is, the whole argument quality is better than quantity doesn’t always hold up, and you need to do the research and the numbers to determine which has a greater edge.  And without a doubt, it is a fact if you can take your same edge, and apply it more often than you are now, you will make more money and be more profitable.

Thus, in regards to the question as to which is forex trading method is better, the answer is neither one is better, but both!

Quality matters, but can under-perform.  Quantity repeats the process faster of making profit, but has to be considered in the larger scheme and what is most natural for you.  However neither forex trading method is better, and the best edge lies somewhere in between the two.

So don’t be fooled by any freshman arguments stating one is better than the other – because they are simply not true, highly inaccurate and misleading.

Hopefully this quality vs quantity forex trading article will put a lot of the mis-information to rest, and give you a new perspective on this critical subject. In a follow up article, I will talk about how I approach this subject in my personal trading, and what I think is the ‘Ideal Trader‘ in relationship to these two.

Kind Regards,
Chris Capre