Tuesday, December 29, 2015

2015 YEAR IN REVIEW

Time to review 2015. 

RESULTS

Overall, I finished the year up 18.77%. A large chunk of that growth occurred in the last few months when I began trading the majors exclusively.

These are the results of ALL trades, including minors and exotics.

All Trades (Majors, Minors and Exotics)
Trades taken: 112
Equity growth: 18.77%
Maximum drawdown: 10.55%
Average reward-to-risk: 1.06
Win rate: 57.14%
Profit factor: 1.26


And these are the results of trades involving the MAJOR pairs only.

Majors Only
Trades taken: 30
Equity growth: 17.46%
Maximum drawdown: 8.12%
Average reward-to-risk: 1.04
Win rate: 73.33%
Profit factor: 2.32

Of the 18.77% growth, 17.46% came from trading the majors. Basically, the bulk of my profit came from trading the major pairs.

It should be noted that I only opened 30 major-pair trades, which is a relatively small sample size.

Here's the final equity curve (I've kept the y-axis confidential for privacy):


Major developments this year

Dropping the minors and exotics
I re-examined my trading journal a few months ago and found that the bulk of my profit came from trading the major pairs. I've been trading the majors exclusively since then and experienced significant success. I also revisited my backtests and found my systems performed better with the majors vs the minors and exotics.

Development of nine trading systems
This year, I developed nine technical systems to trade on the daily and weekly timeframes. Alot of these systems are based on older systems that I used to trade, but have been updated or modified. 

I can't daytrade
This isn't really a development, but my experiments with daytrading ended with failure. I just can't do it!

Surviving January 15, 2015
This was the day when the SNB (Swiss National Bank) depegged the Swiss franc from the euro. Many accounts were blown up. I had a live position on the CHFSGD but escaped, losing a few % of my account. Lessons a) use a stop loss (although it didn't help everyone) b) avoid pegged currencies c) don't deposit all of your equity with a single broker (only deposit enough to provide margin). 

Meeting up with other traders
I finally met up with a few traders in real life! Retail trading is a lonely career, so I think it's important to branch out and meet other traders. 


Goals for 2016

Capital raising
Basically gather more money to trade with. This means more hours at work and leveraging my profits. I hope to make 2016 the year of the Big Push.

Improving the quality of my trades
This will be an ongoing process. I'll remain mindful of news and nearby S/R levels when determining my trades, and focus on the majors exclusively.

Opening a myfxbook account
I plan to open a myfxbook account early in 2016 so everyone can follow my results live. 

Professionalise my blog
I'm still treating this blog as a personal diary, but if 2016 is successful, I plan to make my blog much more professional.


That's a wrap. Good luck in 2016, traders!

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

A trade I didn't take (GBPUSD)

With the FOMC press conference this week, I decided to sit the whole week out. In fact, I probably won't trade until after New Year's. 

Anyway, this was a trade I was tempted to trade on Monday. I saw a bullish pinbar on the GBPUSD. My technical indicators all said "BUY", but zooming out, I saw that the GBPUSD was in a longer-term downtrend, and I'd be buying into the upper boundary of the descending channel, posted below.



(click to enlarge)


I also considered the major FOMC decision this week, which has been widely anticipated and speculated for the whole year. This may be the first Federal Reserve hike since the GFC in 2008. Before the release of major news, the market will usually be choppy and indecisive as traders stay out. I took that into consideration as well.

And with the upcoming news release, there may be widely fluctuating spreads and gaps. Just another reason to stay out.

Major indecision + major channel resistance + wide spreads = STAY OUT!

Half the battle is in finding winning trades. The other half is in avoiding losers. 

Monday, November 30, 2015

Review of November Campaign

November draws a close in a few hours, so I may as well post my results for this month.

edit: my last open trade for November just closed.

Trades opened: 12
Profit factor: 2.11
Account growth: 10.21%

Seven of those trades involved the minor / cross pairs, while the remaining five involved the major pairs. Interestingly, all five trades involving the majors won.

Major Developments

Halfway through November, I analysed my last 100 trades and found that most of my profit came from trading the major pairs. I've decided to drop all the minor pairs, and trade the major pairs for the foreseeable future. Since I'm trading fewer pairs, I probably won't trade as often. I'll see how it goes.

But to balance this, I also developed three new trading systems this month. Two are on the weekly timeframe (a weekly pinbar system, and a weekly low volatility candle system), and the other one's a small pinbar reversal system on the daily timeframe. 

With December around the corner, we can expect volatility to drop, especially during the second half of the month. I'll continue trading during the first two weeks of December, and then take a well-deserved break. :)

Then, I plan to finally open a myfxbook account on January 1, 2016. Now you can see my results live!!!

Thursday, November 19, 2015

My performance on Majors vs Crosses

I've just notched 104 trades now, and spent tonight going through my trading history. I'm always looking at ways of improving the quality of my trades, and checked to see how I performed trading the major pairs (EURUSD, GBPUSD etc) versus the crosses and exotics. 


Performance of the Majors
Number of trades: 22
Profit factor: 1.79

Performance of the Crosses and Exotics
Number of trades: 82
Profit factor: 1.03


I also looked at my performance on JPY and non-JPY crosses.

Performance of JPY Crosses
Number of trades: 20
Profit factor: 1.35

Performance of non-JPY Crosses
Number of trades: 62
Profit factor: 0.92


Combining the results of the majors and JPY crosses...

Performance of Majors and JPY Crosses
Number of trades: 42
Profit factor: 1.55


Basically, my trades on non-JPY crosses and exotics have held me down. 

So where to from here?

I'm still deciding whether to drop more pairs. I've already dropped the exotics due to widely-fluctuating spreads and gaps. After over 100 trades, it appears I have a good edge trading the majors and JPY crosses. 

Interesting results. And this is why it's important to keep a trading journal. :)

Saturday, November 14, 2015

WEEK IN REVIEW: 9 Nov to 15 Nov 2015

It's been a quiet week. I only entered one trade and won, pocketing a 0.67R reward.


EURAUD

I saw a low volatility retracement candle at Monday's close, and went short at its low. Price hesitated every time it approached my profit target. My profit target was finally hit on the third day of the trade. 

I think my profit target was too conservative, and I could've aimed for a 1R reward as there was still plenty of room to the most-recent swing low. Of course, I say that with the benefit of hindsight. 

The EURAUD is one of the higher-yielding currency pairs. The overnight interest added 5% to my profit, and I also collected an extra 15 pips in positive slippage. Not too bad!




(click to enlarge)


THOUGHTS

It was a quiet week, and I was tempted to open sub-optimal trades just so that I'd have a position. I held my nerve.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

WEEK IN REVIEW: 2 Nov to 8 Nov 2015

Last week was comfortably profitable. I'd entered four trades, won three and lost one. 

EURGBP

This trade had been opened the previous week, on the 29th October. There was a bearish engulfing candle, and I went short at its low the next day. I took profit at 0.71000, with a reward of 0.5R. Price progressed downwards a little further past 0.71000, before rebounding back up. 



(click to enlarge)


GBPCHF

Likewise, this trade was also opened the previous week, on the 30th October. Momentum was strongly bullish, and I detected a bullish pinbar. There was scope for a 1R reward before meeting the next major resistance level, so I went long and took profit at 1R. 



(click to enlarge)


EURUSD

This was a straightforward setup. I saw a low volatility retracement candle at the close of 2nd November, and went short at its low the next day. I took profit at 1.25R a few days later. A nice simple trade.



(click to enlarge)

GBPAUD

This trade was a loser. I detected a bullish pinbar aligned with bullish momentum, and went long at the break of its high. My reward was 0.5R, just before the swing high. It was pretty tight. Unfortunately, major news came out the same day as my entry (BOE interest rate decision), stopping me out. Looking back, 0.5R reward is too low for a major news day. If the BOE decision was favourable, I only would've won 0.5R. If it was unfavourable, I would've lost 1R. The R:R ratio was lop-sided for such a major event. 


(click to enlarge)


THOUGHTS

Be more aware of critical news events, especially central bank decisions and NFP. If there's a major event, aim for a reward of at least 1R in order to exploit favourable news. If I can't aim for a 1R reward (perhaps because support / resistance is too close), then stay out. 


Thursday, November 5, 2015

MILESTONE: 100 LIVE TRADES!!!

I finally closed my 100th live trade for this year! I started my current portfolio of systems back in May 2015, averaging about 4 trades a week. 

The statistics

Number of trades: 100
Number of trading systems: 4
Average position size: 1.96% equity risk per trade

Current equity growth: 11.35%
Maximum drawdown: 10.42%

Average reward-to-risk: 1.06
Winning probability: 55%
Profit factor (wins) / (losses + costs): 1.17


Equity Curve

I've kept the y-axis blank for privacy reasons.


(the x-axis shows "101" trades as my "first" trade is the initial balance).


Thoughts

If the current trend continues, then 20% annual growth seems reasonable, on par with professional hedge funds. The max drawdown of 10% is pretty normal. My profit factor of 1.17 falls within my backtest results (1.10 to 1.30). 

After reviewing my journal, I saw a number of trades that were prematurely closed due to psychological reasons like fear or impatience. If I had kept all those trades open, most would've hit their profit targets, so my performance should actually be better. A good trader needs to handle his mental state, so I'll continue to focus on this.