Things To Look For When Choosing A Forex Signal Provider
Of course you want to protect your forex account. There are some red flags that make it an easy task. There are lots of traders around as third party signal providers that may be good for a few months or so but are actually ticking time bombs ready to explode. Don't light that fuse.
This treatise is not intended to be an all encompassing answer to the traders problems, it is only a tool to give you a few tips on what to look for and what to avoid. First things to look for:
Trading With No Stops
Even the best trader cannot control all facets of a trade, so the ones without stops must not be on your active list. Power outages and connection disconnects are always possible, no matter how smooth everything else looks. Since you are dealing with immediacy here, news can take the market on a swift and lengthy journey. The last trader you want working with you is the one without stops. This is the first trader to avoid.
Win Sizes Out of Proportion to Losses
Sometimes it is a good tactic to pull profits off the table at a time that seems extraordinarily early. This tactic works well for a trade loser. It cuts your losses allowing your winnings to bolt, thus resulting in more wins than losses. A mighty good thing. But beware of the trader who takes 10 profit gains and has 200 losses on his accounting sheet. This is not the trader for you.
New Guys on the Block
These are not actually red flag traders but you should still avoid them. Any trader with only a few weeks worth of records should not be traded on a live account. You can absolutely run them on a demo for a month and take a look at the results, but if the trader is worth trading, they will still be there in 6 months. And by then you'll have a much better idea of who you're dealing with.
Huge Gains After A Draw Down
Traders who have abnormally big winners at the end of a sizable draw down have usually given up and are taking one last shot. Their account recovers and to the untrained eye it looks like a solid winning trader. For every 10 traders that try this maybe 2 will survive and bounce back. This means that those 2 are floating around waiting for you. When they have their next draw down they will likely try the same "hail mary" play and the results may not be so favorable. Don't let someone trade your money on a wing and a prayer.
Remember what was said in the beginning of this article. These pearls of wisdom are only scratching the surface of things to be aware of in the world of forex. - 23196
This treatise is not intended to be an all encompassing answer to the traders problems, it is only a tool to give you a few tips on what to look for and what to avoid. First things to look for:
Trading With No Stops
Even the best trader cannot control all facets of a trade, so the ones without stops must not be on your active list. Power outages and connection disconnects are always possible, no matter how smooth everything else looks. Since you are dealing with immediacy here, news can take the market on a swift and lengthy journey. The last trader you want working with you is the one without stops. This is the first trader to avoid.
Win Sizes Out of Proportion to Losses
Sometimes it is a good tactic to pull profits off the table at a time that seems extraordinarily early. This tactic works well for a trade loser. It cuts your losses allowing your winnings to bolt, thus resulting in more wins than losses. A mighty good thing. But beware of the trader who takes 10 profit gains and has 200 losses on his accounting sheet. This is not the trader for you.
New Guys on the Block
These are not actually red flag traders but you should still avoid them. Any trader with only a few weeks worth of records should not be traded on a live account. You can absolutely run them on a demo for a month and take a look at the results, but if the trader is worth trading, they will still be there in 6 months. And by then you'll have a much better idea of who you're dealing with.
Huge Gains After A Draw Down
Traders who have abnormally big winners at the end of a sizable draw down have usually given up and are taking one last shot. Their account recovers and to the untrained eye it looks like a solid winning trader. For every 10 traders that try this maybe 2 will survive and bounce back. This means that those 2 are floating around waiting for you. When they have their next draw down they will likely try the same "hail mary" play and the results may not be so favorable. Don't let someone trade your money on a wing and a prayer.
Remember what was said in the beginning of this article. These pearls of wisdom are only scratching the surface of things to be aware of in the world of forex. - 23196
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