My
Trading Journal
It has been a month since I last posted my trading journal. Office
commitments had prevented me from doing so, in fact, from trading at all. It
was until early June that I entered the market again. Now, taking some time
over the weekend to share my trading results from early June.
Table below shows the results of the first ten days of June (excuse
me for not showing the lot sizes J):
Started off the month of June with shorting EURUSD after seeing the
show card on H4 time frame (my trades were also based on H4 time frame). From
the table, you can see that there were three entries were made at $1.0940 (all
three with the same lot sizes), taking profit at different levels. First target
($1.0920) was hit after nearly 7 hours after entering, taking 20 pips. About a
little over an hour later, second target ($1.0900) was hit, taking another 40 pips. After
pocketing 60 pips from the first two entries, shifted the stop loss to +ve 1
pip and let the third entry run, waiting for it to hit my third target
($1.0883). Unfortunately, the price reversed and hit my stop loss. Took 61 pips
in total from this trade.
On the same day, I took another on GBPUSD, it was a long trade.
Entered at market $1.5240 for the first entry and set a pending order for
second entry at $1.5217. Took profit ($1.5270) on the first entry about half an
hour later making 30 pips. Cancelled my second entry as price did not fill my
order.
On June 2, tried my luck again on GBPUSD given that the chart still
showed a long trade is viable. Why two entries with the same TP levels? Oops,
made an error on the lot size, so make a “correction” entry to increase the lot
size to the level that I wanted. The
market gave me 18 pips in 30 minutes.
While looking at the charts at night after retiring the kids, saw an
entry show card to short USDCAD, entered at $1.2447. Checked the trade again
through cell phone, took slight profit, 17 pips.
June 3, entered at market ($0.7139) for NZDUSD for a long trade and
put a pending order for AUDUSD. Woke up the next morning and check the trades,
NZDUSD had not hit profit level yet and AUDUSD was not filled. Price action
showed that bull momentum is not present, therefore following the rules I had
to close the trades before leaving for office. I took only a marginal 9 pips
for each entry for NZDUSD. Price in the end went against me. Whew, luckily had
the early warning exit system to help me out.
Again, I wasn’t able to trade for the next two days and came the
weekend.
On the next Tuesday, June 9, saw a number of show cards for entries.
Set a pending order for EURJPY but was never filled. Saw an opportunity for
GBPUSD for a short entry just before having my dinner. Took it at market @
$1.5309. The trade gave me 17 pips after the dinner. Later that night, took
another short trade on EURGBP @ $0.7352. Before retiring for the night, hastily
entered a sell trade on EURAUD as well, at $1.4656.
Woke up the next morning and took a look at my trades. To my
surprise, the EURGBP pair did not hit my tp yet while EURAUD was suffering
loss. I did not like what I see and closed off both trades. Took marginal
profit of 9 pips on EURGBP while suffered heavy loss on EURAUD. Learnt my
lesson here about hastily entering trades that did not fulfill trading
criteria.
Later that morning saw an entry show card on D1 time frame for
NZDUSD, took a long trade at $0.7144 but my tp was based on H4 time frame. This
entry were made with the expectation to cover the loss from EURAUD pair. Took
13 pips from this trade. The return, combined with the winning trades from the
day before was enough to break even against the loss on EURAUD. In fact, if the
price for NZDUSD went all the way up after that. But I called it for the week,
did not take any more trade for the rest of the week.
Over the weekend, after going through the charts for EURAUD, only to
realize that the pair already hit support and should not have sold it.
From my trading results, many may feel that 143 pips in 10 trading
days is not “meaty” enough. For me, a newbie in trading and doing this on part
time basis. I am contented with what I have achieved so far. I am confident
that with the passage of time, my skills will get better and warrant me to take
more pips from my trades.
Lessons learnt:
Be meticulous in reading your charts, never made an entry in haste.
If you are time deprived, do not trade. Let my profits run.
Do your maths and calculate your risk, ensure that you are able to
withstand the potential losses from trades, both your account size and mentally.
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