Forex
Trading Training: Rules For Placing Orders
If you have started your Forex trading training you
may initially have a challenge with understanding how orders are
placed.
I
remember when I first started reading about the Forex and practicing
in a demo account, it took me a while to understand how
stops and limits worked in relation to price.
This
article sets out the main rules governing the placement of orders
with a free graphic
(Click Here For Graphic) which
you can keep on your desktop and refer to at anytime until the
rules have 'sunk in'. You will find this lesson extremely important
if you are in the early stages of your forex trading training.
|
|
Untitled Document
Amazing!
Forex Killer Software
from Andreas Kirchberger - Professional
Trader

Click
Here |
|
Here are the basics:
1. In each currency pair, the first currency is the base currency
which you either buy or sell. For example, in the case of EUR/USD,
if you believe the euro is going to strengthen against the US dollar
you would place a BUY order (go long). If you believe the dollar
will strengthen against the euro, you would place a SELL order (go
short) for the EUR/USD currency pair.
2. In
your dealing station you will notice two prices quoted for each
currency pair, a BID price and an ASK price. The difference
in the two prices is known as the pip spread the dealer takes from
every trade. For the major currency pairs this can be between 3-5
pips.
NOTE:
When you place a BUY order you will enter the trade at the ASK
price. When you place a SELL order you will enter the trade at
the BID price. 3. There are two types of orders you can use to enter a trade:
A market order is
an order to buy or sell at the market price the moment you enter
the trade by clicking your
mouse button.
An entry order is
an order to buy or sell when the market price reaches a certain
target or level you anticipate
from your technical analysis.
Note: Avoid
market orders as they seldom give you the best entry point unless
you really understand the market.
An entry order allows you time to analyze key price levels and set
the order to be executed only if price pulls back or reaches that
level. This way you enter the trade at an optimum level.
Stops and Limits
Once you have calculated your trade and anticipated how far you
think price will go, you need to enter a limit order so the trade
will automatically exit at that profit level. In the case of a buy
order, your limit will be set above the entry price. In the case
of a sell order, your limit will be set below the entry price.
For your protection you then need to set a stop order. If price
goes against you your trade will exit at a loss according to the
number of pips you have calculated that you can afford to lose taking
into account your equity. In the case of a buy order, your stop would
be below the entry price. If the case of a sell order, your stop
would be above the entry price.
As part of your Forex trading training, it is important to get very
familiar with the software you are provided with from your online
broker. Practice, practice, practice, making entry orders, and setting
the entry price and the stop and limit levels.
It is easy in the early days of Forex trading training to get mixed
up with direction. You may wish to place an entry order to sell (go
short) and inadvertently put a buy order in instead only to get a
shock when you see a minus figure under the pip column steadily growing.
The
details explained above are available in a graphic you can keep
on your desktop and refer to at any time you are trading. Just
click here for the graphic
Then as part of your daily Forex trading training, refer to it each
time you place a trade in your demo account until your understanding
of the rules of order entry, bid and ask price, stops and limits,
come automatically without thinking.
You will be laying a solid foundation for more advanced Forex trading
training steps so you can concentrate your mental energies on price
and chart analysis rather than being sidetracked by confusion over
basic order rules.
Related
Articles:
Lesser Known Forex Strategy
Reveals Best Possible Entry Level
Currency
Day Trading: Are Your Stops Killing You?
Your
Forex Trading Style: The Spider Or The Cat Approach?
This article
may be used under the following Terms & Conditions:
It must be taken from ezinearticles.com using this link:
Forex Trading Training: Rules For Placing Orders
The article may not be altered in any way and must include the
Resource Box
as
it appears in the article directory above |