forex training

Vic Noble’s Interview with another hugely successful member Dave

October 24th, 2008

I conduct frequent interviews with Forexmentor members so that their stories can be an  inspiration in your own trading.  My latest interview is with Dave who I privately coached last summer (July 2008). Dave’s understanding and his adherence to the basic fundamentals of trading is very commendable. In my opinion, this focus is directly responsible for his faster-than-normal progress.

As in other interviews, please listen carefully to his attitude and mindset, and how he overcame what he called a fairly “random” approach prior to our coaching session, and settled down to tremendous consistent approach - something that’s difficult to master for a lot of traders. 

The full interview can be heard by clicking the following link:
http://www.forexmentor.com/coaching/interview-dave-1008.html 

My role here at Forexmentor is to provide personal coaching to traders by keeping them on track. I also offer several other products that you can check out below.  Please don’t hesitate to call for a chat if you’d like some help with your own trading, it would be my pleasure to talk with you!

Enjoy the interview!

All the very best,

Vic Noble
Personal Coachinfo@forexmentor.com

Practise, practise, practise.

October 7th, 2008

You know the story of the tourist in

New York who asked: “How do you get to Carnegie Hall”? The answer of course is: “Practice, practice, practice.”

I have been thinking about trading and what we do as we try to learn to be successful traders. We read books, attend seminars, watch webinars, videos, and various other materials. Perhaps we even work with a mentor. Then we just start trading. Perhaps, we do so in a demo or practice account, or with a micro mini account where we don’t risk very much money. But what we do, is we jump right in and try to play the Sonata.

From my music experience, and what I know about the education and training of just about any other activity, whether it be a sport, a language, a vocation, or a profession, this is not how complex activities are learned. We should be trying to understand trading in small, separable pieces; small skill sets that we could practice and learn independent of the whole. Then we should put them together in a way that builds on what we are learning until finally we have a complete trading methodology. The different ways we develop and learn those skill sets and the different ways we put them together might yield a different methodology for each of us, one that fits us as individuals. Perhaps the process of studying and practicing the individual skill sets will in itself assist us in discovering the eventual trading methods that best suit us.

What are the small skill sets we could identify and practice? Here are a few that I think might work: Identifying support and resistance; entering a trade; when to exit a trade; reading and understanding price action; finding reversal patterns; scaling out of a trade; top down analysis; following a plan with discipline; keeping a gain from becoming a loss. This list is only a first cut. I am not even sure that a meaningful practice session could be developed for each of these. But you have to start somewhere and as far as I know, this is new ground.

Full article is available at:
http://www.forexmentor.com/forex-trading-articles.html

Dick Thompson
Forexmentor User Group Leader

Seattle WA

Chris Lori’s Interview with forex trader Alex

September 5th, 2008

As most of you are aware, I am a member of the ForexMentor team and conduct workshops, webinars, pro traders club and offer an extensive line of ForexMentor products to help you develop as a trader.
 
A student of mine, Alex Hernandez, has become a private trader and has achieved a 90% success rate in his trading, recently.

Please listen to my interview with Alex at:
www.forexmentor.com/pro/interviews/sep0408-alex.html
 
Chris Lori
CTA

Who Manages Risk Anymore by Chris Lori

September 4th, 2008

Nobel Prize - winning economists and “genius’” Myron Scholes and Robert C. Merton were founders of Long Term Capital Management, which in 1998 lost $4 billion. That helped foster a global financial crisis and triggered both a Wall Street-led bailout and congressional hearings on the dangers of hedge funds, the freewheeling pools for wealthy investors and institutions that often trade heavily and rely on borrowed money to achieve jacked up returns. LTCM had leveraged a notional amount of $2.5B into excess of $100B of investment. NOW THAT’S GENIUS!

Over the past year there have been countless stories of banks, funds and traders, who are supposed to be brilliant,  that have wiped out funds or lost significant sums of investor money, while the institutions and managers retained the nice fee’s on the assets past held. In many cases there are bailout contingencies using tax payer funds while the managers still get into their nice car and drive to their nice home.

When a fund manager or a trader establishes a risk profile for their fund, portfolio or account, it is important to consider that the market can and will do anything. By they way, I’m an institutional fund manager. In fact, at some point and time, be it sooner or later, the market will take on a movement that even the most “genius” of analysts had not anticipated. Even if a genius had anticipated the unexpected movement, what the genius does not know, nor does anybody, is the manner in which the market will move in the said, or “predicted” direction, thus challenge ones ability to manage positions around the movement. That is the great thing about trading! Genius or not, it requires the ability of a market participant to mesh their understanding of the market to that of the market environment and attempt to extract money while retaining respect for the market. The first order of business is to focus on how much you can lose. So if the first order of business is to focus on how much you can lose, then establishing a concrete risk profile for your fund is foremost and critical.

Developing well defined and reasonable risk profile for your trading typically does not require genius. Sure, the more diversified the portfolio, the more complex risk control can become, but one must always ask themselves one simple question; “What are the consequences if every position we are holding moves against us for a sustained period?”

Many managers are wondering why they did not ask themselves this question the past few months. I warned traders of the risks of trading during the month of August and suggested some directional risks they should avoid.

The reason i write this has been inspired by yet another genius fund that has failed. That of the $2.8 billion Ospraie Fund that lost 27% in August and is down over 38% for the year, with no guarantee investors will receive another 20% of the funds remaining. They claim the drop in metals and energy has contributed to the losses. I’m sure there’s more to the story, but perhaps excessive leverage (borrowing) was a contributor?

http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080903.wospraie0903/GIStory/

So traders, if you are using excessive gearing or mismanaging risk in your account/portfolio, then look at the positive… You are trading just like some of the biggest names in the business. Seriously, I would like to see geniuses put more of their study into controlling risk, rather than working tirelessly on developing new models to pull money out of the market, because sooner or later, the market will take on a direction or behavior that the risk managers had not anticipated or taken into consideration in their risk control forumula. In fact, part of the problem in larger institutions and funds, is that the developers of the models to take profit do not understand the risk management side and vise versa. Its simple, if you overlook or mismanage risk, you will eventually lose all or too much of your account.

Don’t forget to download “Face the Trader Within” by Chris Lori

Traders, I could write a book on this subject that would go into considerable detail on risk management, but i’ll leave this with you, for now.

Chris Lori
CTA

Video: COT subscriber made 737+ pips in a week on two pairs!

August 18th, 2008

My name is Frank Paul, and I’m the developer of a course and weekly market forecast service available exclusively at Forexmentor called “Forex Profits with COT”.

The purpose of the course, which comprises seven modules with a total running time of more than 5-1/2 hours, is to provide you a thorough orientation to all aspects of the important Commitments of Traders report.

The purpose of the companion weekly forecasting service, the first month of which is provided to you free of charge when you purchase the course, is to assess COT signals and qualify them with reference to high-level Elliott Wave analysis for a total of 9 currency and 4 bonus markets we look at every week.

One of our subscribers recently emailed me his weekly results, which he indicated was helped along by our service: +567 pips in 4 days on three trades on GBP/JPY, and +737 pips total for the week on just two pairs.  While it is impossible to guarantee or even predict trading results you can expect from using our service, the important point is that your sense of confidence in trading may be enhanced with the quality of analysis we can provide you.

Please watch the following free, no-obligation video presentation that provides more information on our product: http://www.forexmentor.com/cot/aug1808/

I hope you enjoy the show. To find more about the Forexmentor COT service, please visit: www.forexmentor.com/cot/

Best of luck with your trading.

Sincerely,

Frank Paul
Forexmentor Team
www.forexmentor.com

FX Perspectives by Chris Lori for August 2008

August 7th, 2008

Considerations:  I do not hold a holy grail, a crystal ball or rub a rabbit’s foot. If that is what you are looking for, you won’t find it on the computer where I’m seated. If you want a holy grail, the best I can offer you is this… max risk on total exposure should not exceed 1.5% of base (notional) non-diversified equity. Even that’s a little high. If you are a “holy grail seeker” it will cost you more than you will earn and I’m sorry I can’t help you.

My Trading Approach:  I trade FX cash/spot, outright forwards, DCI’s and some options, when necessary. It is important to be cognizant of the micro and macroeconomic environment and what is driving price, whether it makes sense or not. We engage in short, medium and long term trades combining both technical and fundamental aspects. Shorter term are more technical and less fundamental while longer term are more fundamental and less technically driven decisions. I trade technical patterns that consider volatility, range, time of day, fractals and Fibonacci. Fundamentally, my decisions are based on perspectives driven by Interest Rate Spreads/Differentials and Economic Growth.

I specialize in AUD/JPY, but also have a predilection for GBP/USD and consider other G10 pairs depending on where opportunities are presenting themselves per rate spreads and economic growth/weakness. My approach can be difficult to adapt, but once done so, it is surprisingly straight forward and simple. I know exactly what I am looking for in market dynamics. The approach suits a certain temperament and is not for everyone.

You can read the whole perspective for August 2008 at this link:
http://www.forexmentor.com/forex-trading-articles/aug08outlook.html
  

Vic Noble’s interview with forex trader Tony who has just recently turned the corner

August 7th, 2008

This interview with Tony is different because he has just recently turned the corner in a very consistent way, after spending such a very long time frustrated with his results. What changed things for Tony was a conversation we had some time ago, and he decided that if I couldn’t help him, then it was time to quit.
 
Please listen to my interview with Tony at:
http://www.forexmentor.com/coaching/interview-tony-0808.html

 

THE TRADING EDGE

July 31st, 2008

Most of us, when we are “newbie’s”, have the perception that trading is easy, or at least it is not rocket science. We think that we can acquire a certain basic knowledge, both fundamental and technical, then find a methodology and start trading. Most of us quickly get a rude awakening when we find that our account does not grow as we had expected it to. Interesting enough, in our search for the reason for our failure, we choose not to revisit the total experience noted above, but to focus on the methodology with which we had selected to trade. Why? I am not really sure. Perhaps it is because our newly gained fundamental and technical knowledge is learned and the methodology is generally acquired from some outside source. A trading system, if you will.

Most traders, including myself, at one time or another spend a great deal of time and energy trying to resolve the initial trading failures by looking for a system. The idea is that if we can just find a system that works, that fits our newly discovered style of trading, we will be successful. We quest for that Holy Grail.

I submit to you this thesis, that the most significant problem the new forex trader faces is getting over the idea that a trading system is a necessary ingredient to successful trading. If you were to “Google” the words “Forex Trading Systems”, you would receive approximately 1,400,000 hits. That should give you an idea of how many individual trading systems might be out there. Most of these systems were developed by traders, some who are very successful traders, and some who are unable to trade, however are great salesmen. Some of these systems work, some don’t.

Some will work under certain market conditions, then when conditions change, no longer work. Some work for the developer because he or she just happens to be an expert trader and could make any system work, but is unable to incorporate that internal expertise into the system. Finding a trading system is a huge, daunting undertaking, and after a number of years going down this path, I have concluded that this is the wrong approach. I think that the correct approach is to learn how to trade. Sounds very glib, doesn’t it? But if you know how to trade, if you understand the market, if you understand how price moves and what causes it to move, then YOU CAN MAKE ANY SYSTEM WORK.

I have been fortunate over the years to become acquainted with a number of very fine, professional traders. Some are authors, some are teachers, and some are fund managers. Many of their names are well known. What is important is that they all have certain common characteristics. I will not go into detail on this; there are some very fine books written about some of these people. But briefly it comes down to this:

 You can read the whole article at this link:
http://www.forexmentor.com/forex-trading-articles/the-trading-edge.html
 

What to Do Between Valid COT Signals?

June 26th, 2008

When talking about Commitments of Traders we inevitably try to turn our attention to exciting signals that may forewarn of important reversal points in the market. But what do we do during those sometimes lengthy periods in between valid COT signals?  What if we get a signal but the
market seems to continue going in the opposite direction?

My name is Frank Paul and I’m the developer and weekly host of the combined “Forex Profits with COT” educational course and market forecast subscription service.

I’d like to invite you to watch a 27-minute, no obligation presentation on how we can execute exciting position trades on important reversal events even when COT data is not giving clear signals:

Don’t miss this exciting video presentation:
http://www.forexmentor.com/cot/presentation-062608.html

For more information on the Forexmentor Forex Profits with COT service, please go here: http://www.forexmentor.com/cot/

Happy Trading!

Frank Paul
& the Forexmentor team
www.forexmentor.com

Vic Noble’s interview with a former casino dealer from Arizona

May 27th, 2008

In this interview, Ben - a former casino dealer from Arizona, shares his insights from his former days as a black jack and poker dealer, and how he made the transformation to becoming a full time Forex trader.

For about 1 ½ years now, Ben has been making his living by trading the Forex markets!

Please listen to the interview at:
http://www.forexmentor.com/coaching/interview-ben-0508.html

Vic Noble
Personal Coach
Forexmentor.com/coaching/