Haha this blog just started and I am already behind in my
blog posts – been busy at work and all.
I have been experimenting with Forex trading of late. For
the uninitiated, forex trading is the short term trading of currencies, betting
that one currency will appreciate against the other in the short term. Many
factors influence why one currency appreciates against the other. These range
from interest rate policy, announcement of trade figures, general doom and gloom
stories from said country.
I have researched quite extensively into forex trading
recently. I recall in March 2012 when I first started stock trading, I did look
a little into forex trading. But honestly, the forex quote itself scared the
hell out of me – add to the fact that forex trades were so highly leveraged (up
to 98% omg!) – I simply swore I won’t touch forex and will start responsibly
with good old stocks and blue chips. I decided to take a closer look at forex
trading a year into my trading journey because I discovered a few things about
myself during my first year of trading.
1)
I have a severe distrust of the market. I am
trying to move to a buy and hold passive dividend income strategy, but usually
my trades are short, never more than a year. I believe limiting exposure to the
market is the best bet of all
2)
I am not very greedy. You know the saying “lets
your profits run”? For me, as long as profits start to jog, I take them off the
table.
3)
I buy risky stuff. For a first year investor, I
have bought into dubious declare-massive-profits-but-no-dividends S chips, Myanmar
counters, pennies. Actually that is quite bad. But I digress
4)
I can take massive portfolio draw downs. Stock
lost 20% of value? Shrugs, let me look into averaging down.
From all this, I was just thinking that actually forex
trading could suit me really well. It’s short term get in get out, very risky
(which I can take) and I’m not greedy (so it rises tens of pips and then I’m
gonna go). So all this led to me to exploring forex a bit more.
Ok, let me impress upon the reader that I am honestly quite
shit at exchanging money. Like, I even have problems reading the quote at a
money changer. So imagine my horror seeing a forex quote like this:
EUR/USD = 1.3077/1.3081
Wert. I’m never gonna master this.
But I read on and I began to realise some basics. For
example, putting money in SGD banks gives you quite a shit rate yeah? But
imagine converting SGD to AUD where the Aussie banks give you a better rate.
You earn just on interest alone! [So I asked my hubs, why on earth doesn’t everyone
in Sg convert all their spare SGD to AUD and earn the higher interest rate?
He mumbled something about interest rate
parity and said that was something I should have known in J1 econs. But anyone
knowing me during J1 will know that I pay close to no attention in econs class
so obviously how would I even know about interest rate parity.] Anyway, apparently
one of the basics of forex trading is something called the currency carry which
means that if you use SGD and buy AUD, and you have an overnight position, you get
the difference of the higher interest rate credited to you. It’s like wow. But
of course that is assuming ceteris paribus no movement between the SGD/aud
pair, which in a 24 hrs totally liquid forex market is not possible. So really,
the appreciating factor of one currency vis a vis the other is of paramount
importance here.
Ok So lets say you think EUR is totally going to depreciate
against USD cos of all the horsemeat thing and the Italian elections. What you
should do is short the EUR/USD pair which means you sell EUR to hold USD. So
that next time you can use the AUD to buy back a weakened SGD and get more SGD!
Few things to consider:
1)
Spread
Ok rmb the quote I put up there? EUR/USD
= 1.3077/1.3081. The 1.3077 is the bid price and the 1.3081 is the ask price.
If you want to long (buy) the EUR/USD, you have to pay USD $1.3081 to get 1
Euro. If you want to sell this 1 euro immediately, you get paid only
USD$1.3077. So the market earns the spread of USD$0.0004 (4 pips). This is the
cost the forex broker charges for opening the position. Apparently there are no
transaction costs unlike stock positions. Dunno why.
2)
Currency Carry
Ok I mentioned this above. And if you buy a higher
yielding currency by selling a lower yielding currency, then you get paid the
difference in interest rate. The reverse means you pay the interest rate
difference.
3)
Overnight closure of positions
Ok I read somewhere that some
brokers close your positions overnight and reopen them in the morning which
means each day you incur the spread fees (omg), I am not sure if CMCmarkets do
this (I am experimenting with their demo account now), so I guess I will have
to email them to us before I get a live account
4)
Holding fees
So I also read somewhere that if you hold a position
overnight you have to pay holding fees to your broker. Again I think this
varies amongst forex brokers so I gotta make sure that any brokerage I open
with will not have holding fees like that.
So I have started a demo account with CMC and initially
long-ed the EUR/USD pair until my hubs was like, dafuq are you doing, aint ppl
fleeing from EUR now cos of the whole anti austerity vote in Italy. Then I was
like oh yeah, so I closed that position.
I bought like 100 Euros, put up $3.25 sgd as margin and lost
like $0.50. As you can see, not a great start.
So I started shorting the Eur/Usd, selling 1000 euros this
time, putting up SGD 32 as margin. Omg, just as I did that, Euro started
recovering, and my loss went up to SGD 12 before bouncing back to sgd 4 (at
time of blogging). I wondered if it were real money and in much larger portions,
would I have the mental strength to hold on or would I have cut losses pronto? All
this is really hard to test with a demo account. It also showed me the great
importance of stop loss.
Stop losses protect your profits and limit losses. But
trading currency pairs with great volatility could mean you can stopped out of
a trade prematurely. The one thing I do not understand is the trailing stop
loss. You see when I sold Eur/Usd on my demo account for 1.3077, I set a
trailing stop loss at 300 pips (half the margin). But when the Eur/Usd started
recovering, I found that the trailing stop loss also moved! This baffles me and
I still cannot explain it. Is not the trailing stop loss supposed to remain at
the same level when price movement is not favourable? Only when price movement
is favourable to the trade then the trailing stop loss follows it upwards? How
can a trailing stop loss move down with a bad price movement – surely that
defeats the point of a stop loss? I have no answers to why my trailing stop
loss reacted this way but I guess I will have to experiment a lot more before I
put real money to this.
Just dropping to say hello tsusmagne ;)
ReplyDeleteLOL! Hope you have found out the difference between a limit stop-loss and a trailing stop-loss ;)
By the way, you may want to explore - standadising, varying, and testing different position sizes to match your risk profile and the volatlity of your trading vehicle.
It's also a great risk management technique to complement with stop losses.
Have fun!
Yo wassup SMOL!
ReplyDeleteNah I still haven’t figured out the difference – my forex research on standstill this week haha! I’m pretty sure I understand the theory, but dunno why the trailing stop loss is moving downwards with neg price movements :S
Thanks for intro – will continue demo –ing with different positions and levels of leverage before I jump into the forex foray!!
Such fun!