How to Keep your Trading Simple & Effective (K.I.S.S) (2024)

K.I.S.S – Keep it simple stupid!

This is a well known acronym spanning across many industries. It ishuman nature to try to over-complicate tasksto try gain thecompetitive edge.

Most traders initially believe that by making their systems increasinglycomplicated, they’remaking positive stepstoimprove theirtrading in an attempt to ‘out smart’ the rest of the herd.

All this really achievesis:taking onmoreworkload than necessary, making an analysis more difficult andconfusing, and it turns therelatively straight-forwardtask of making a tradingdecision into amuch more stressful and difficult process.

Today I wanted to share some tips on how you can keep your trading simple and effective.

If you ever feel like you’re losing grip of your trading, do yourself a favor and refer back to this article togive your Forex trading a clean-up.

Don’t Go Crazy with Support & Resistance Levels or Trend lines

This has got to be the quickest way to make a mess of your Forex charts and make interpretingyour analysis a nightmare – yet there are a lot of traders still committing this sin.

In our last lesson: , we talked about how marking more than a few lines is enough ‘tip the scales’, and make your chart look confusing.

If you’re really struggling with where to mark your levels, ask yourself this question: “If I was only allowed to mark one level on my chart, where would I setit to best highlight my analysis”.

Check out my EURUSD chart below…

I am confidentthe above chart communicates my analysis clearly, even with just this one level. We could probably extend this a little by markingout the next support level here, but we wouldn’t need to go any furtherthan that.

The ‘one level’ approach can be a very effective way of simplifying the way you mark support and resistance levels. You will often see my Forex charts with only one or two horizontal lines on them.

Always keep your analysis clear and concise for your own benefit. Other traders should be able totake one look at your charts, and understand exactly what you’re trying to communicate.

Ask a fellow trader to check out your charts and get their opinion. They may not be able to read your analysis because they simply don’t understand your system, or your chart just may look like a war zone of data which confuses them, which means it’s likely to confuse you too.

If you can’t remember what level is for what, and you’ve gotcolored spaghettiall over your chart – it might be time for a ‘detox’. Scrub thatchart clean, start again and keep things simple!

Checkpoint

Don’t mess your chart up with masses of support, resistance or trend lines – you’re only going to make interpreting the charts harder for yourself. If you only were allowed to market one level on your chart, where would you place it? Keep to this rule to help de-clutter your screen.

Developa Daily Trading Routine

Are you a ‘fly by the seat of your pants’ kind of Forex trader?

Don’t just ‘wing it’ when it comes to checking charts – you will benefit from a structuredroutine.

Introducethe next level of disciplineinto your trading by taking advantage of the benefits a routine has to offer.A daily trading routine can:

  • Help remove chaos, fragmentation and undisciplined trading behavior – and give you back a sense of control
  • Prevent you from missing profitabletrading opportunities
  • Allow you to organize your real life and trading together so they workin harmony, instead ofconflicting
  • Help you maintaina healthy trading/life balance so you’re not glued to trading screens any more thannecessary

We all know how addictive Forex trading can be, and how easily it is to over-commit yourself to the charts. Staring at price charts for long periods of time is not healthy and it can cause you to do really silly things.

One of the main benefits of aroutine is to structure your trading around certain hours and prevent you from wasting timewatching price ticking away meaninglessly.

In any goodtrading system – there are key times when you can check the market for trading opportunities. If your trading system requires you to sit in front of the chart endlessly, burn it and move on.

As a price action trader, the key times for me are

  • The New York Close
  • Around the London Open

Here in Australia – we’re kind of at a geographically strategic place for Forex trading. The New York close occurs in the morning, and the London open is in the late afternoon.

So, the first thing I do is get up, do my morning things and get ready to check the markets at the New York close for any end of day signals. Then I have all day to do any other tasks I set out for myself, until it is time for the London open in the afternoon.

At the London open – Ire-scan the marketsto observewhat occurred during the Asia session. I amparticularity on thelook outfor any Asia breakout traps which may present good trading opportunities as the market moves into the busier trading sessions of London and New York. I can set up any pending orders and let the market carry on with it’s thing, while I carry on with mine.

Below is an example of the Asia failed breakout in formation, and generally what I am looking out towards the end of the Asia session…

The screen shot above was taken just around London open.Because there was a failed breakout during Asia, I am anticipating the market will push down going into the London/Us session. Keeping it real simple!

The market did just that, and this is a common strategy I use everyday in the markets and one you can learn more about in the War Room.

I don’t really have to be at the charts at any other time. Some War Room members like to trade the 4 hour charts, so they could set their alarms every 4 hours between a set period to check in withthe market and scan for any 4 hour price action signals.

Traders will developa strong urge to intervene withopen positions if they are sitting there staring atthem for prolonged periods of time. There is nothing more stressful than watching an open position while itis ticking into the negative. Some traders let their emotions get the better of them and‘cut their losses’ by exiting early, only to find that price later reversed and hit the original profit target.

If you committed yourself toa structuredroutine, you would instead check back in with the markets at your designated timetosee atrade that closed in profit–noticing that it dipped into the negative before hitting target but being unaffected emotionally because your trade was successful.

See the difference here? You could sit at the screenand allow the natural movements of the market churn your stomach, or just me back later and see how everything unfolded.

Don’t be one of those traders who ‘babysits’ their positions and becomes the ‘OCD micro-manager‘. Set your trades up, walk away, go back to your life and let your trades unfold in a natural way.

How do you determinewhen it is most important to check your charts? Develop a routine that will work for you and stick to it.

Your will be surprised what you can achieve – most ‘full-time’ traders still maintain a day-job, study full-time, or are full-time stay-at-home parents.Many War Room traders havedeveloped a routine which allows them to trade effectively around their day-to-day obligations and you can too.

Checkpoint

There is no need to sit and stare at ticking candlesticks all day. Develop a routine around your daily life so you can allocate some time to check the market at key times. Two key times I recommend if possible in your time zone is to check the London open and the New York close.

Cut back on all the ‘non-essentials’

As humans we are naturally innovative and are always looking to improve on what we build.

The counter-intuitive nature of the market conflicts with the way we are programmed to function in our day-to-day lives.

With Forex trading, simplicity can be the ultimate level of sophistication and provide much better results than a system which has been extended to use more data and variables.

It’s really important that you know your limits and you don’t make Forex trading so mentally taxing for yourself.

At first, adding lots of indicators onto your chart for ‘extra confirmation’ may seem like a really good idea, but most will agree it does short, and long term damage.

A minority oftraders will say boosting up your chart with indicators is a good ‘filtering’ method for screening out bad trades.

In reality, all this achievesisan overload of information– andresults that conflicts with one another! A typical situation you will run into when dealing with multiple indicators is:

  • Indicator A says buy
  • Indicator B tells you to sell
  • Indicator C is saying you should stay out of the market.

A price chart shouldn’t be hard to read or interpret. But all the ‘extras’ will give you a sense of mental fog. The essential data liesin the price movement itself.

Candlesticks for example, give you 4 points of important data – the high, low, open and close price. With this simple set of data you can tell a lot about what’s going on with a chart and anticipate future price moves.

Using the 4 data points of a candle above, we can identify simple ‘buy’ and ‘sell’ signals. The chart above illustrates a candlestick sell signal called the Rejection Candle Reversal pattern.

A rejection candle is themost common occurring candlestick reversal signal in the markets. In the example above, thecandle shows thetrader that the market rejected higher prices during thattrading session – closing way off it’s highs.

The closing price for the day was also lower than the opening price, which is another bearish clue. Adding to this further, the rejection candle high price also created a new swing high in the market – this tells usthe market is stepping downward with the overall bearish pressure, another bearish clue.

Using these 4 points of data we identified a common candlestick sell signal, and performed some simple market analysis which gave trades that ‘early warning’ hint that the market was about to sell off.

There are many other candlestick signals like this one whicharederived from the 4 data points of the common candlestick.

The point is, you don’t need all the extras loaded onto your chart to be able to do great market-analysis or confident trading decisions. Keep things simple, start by stripping back your chart andeliminating the non-essentials toenjoy better clarity and sanity with your Forex trading.

Checkpoint

Newbie traders are notorious for diving head first into a load of indicators. Indicators unfortunately only work under very specific circ*mstances, and traders will often stack them to try filter out the bad signals one indicator may generate. Often indicators will ‘fight each other’ on your chart and offer conflicting variables. Keep trading simple by learning how to interpret a plain candlestick chart – it’s easier than it sounds.

Learn a Strategy that will Keep your Trading Simple

If you’re following a complicated strategy that involves heavy math, a lot of indicators or long hours in front of the screen – you’re going to have a difficulttime finding‘peace’ with your trading.

You need to be clear with yourself about what you want your strategy to do for you. Do you want your strategy to confuse the hell out of you, or provide you a clear and concise way of reading the markets and the means of making a trading decision without all the stress.

You as thetrader must enjoy using thestrategy you dedicate yourself to, so youstick with it.Choose a leantrading system with less ‘moving parts’, so that you can maintain the K.I.S.S principle with ease(keep it simple stupid).

The one trading methodology I’ve found peace with is price action trading. It’s the most simplistic, and purest method of trading the markets. As I’ve demonstrated in the article already, you can do some really awesome market analysis and anticipate some really profitable price moves by reading the candlesticks – which is the core principle of price action trading.

The best part is thatit’s easy to do!

I know that most traders don’t find their ‘place’ in the market until they learn how to read the chartswith the price action trading methodology. I hear this first hand every day!I have many testimonials from War Room traders saying they have only started seeing profitability now and wish they found out about price action strategies years ago – you can check them out for yourself.

You’ve seen some of the price action examples I’ve given here today. If you think those charts werereally cool and you want to get involved in trading with price action, check out the War Room for serious traders – it contains the most comprehensive price action course online. The price action protocol course is something I am very proud of.

If you take anything away from this article, I hope that it is this: simplicity works best in Forex!

Good luck on the charts and don’t forget to leave acomment below.

How to Keep your Trading Simple & Effective (K.I.S.S) (2024)
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