Headquarters: | Seychelles: office 10, floor 2, Vairam Building, Providence Industrial Estate, Providence, Mahe, Seychelles Cyprus: office 102, 13/15 Grigori Afxentiou, 4003, Limassol, Cyprus |
Foundation Year: | 2012 |
Country: | Seychelles |
Email: | support@justmarkets.com |
Trade Platform: | MT4 for Desktop, MT4 Web Terminal, MT4 Android, MT4 iPhone Trader, MT4 iPad Trader MT4 Multi Terminal, MT5 for Desktop, MT5 Web Terminal, MT5 Android, MT5 iPhone Trader, MT5 iPad Trader, Platform for Android, Platform for iOS |
Acc Funding Methods: | Credit Card, Debit Card, Western Union, Perfect Money, Neteller, Skrill, FasaPay, Internal transfer, Local Deposits, Bitcoin, TrustPay, Boleto, Multiple local methods, Sticpay, PayTrust, PayRetailers, Payment Asia, Crypto, Absa , Help2pay, Pix |
Max: Leverage: | 1:3000* |
Min. Deposit: | 1 |
Base Currencies: | USD EUR GBP JPY MYR IDR THB VND KWD CNY ZAR |
Min. Spreads: | 0.2 pips |
"The Trend is Your Friend"--You'll find this oft-quoted passage in many articles on trading Forex (foreign currency). The problem is that unless you know what it really means, it can't help you much in your trading.
Furthermore, depending on your trading style, it might not even be good advice. To learn about following the trend in currency trading, you need first to know if a pair is really trending, and then you have to decide how you're going to approach that currency pair.
The trend, generally speaking, is the basic direction a particular currency is headed. So, for example, if the currency pair EUR/USD is going up and has been for some time, the trend is considered to belong on the Euro.
Note, however, that following the trend is not always as easy as it sounds. For example, if you're working on the 5-minute chart and see that the Euro has been heading up all day, you might very well say that the trend is up. But it may very well be that the Euro has been losing value for the past three weeks and today is simply retracing a bit of its lost ground. Therefore, it is really necessary to identify the time frame you're interested in following and determine the trend in that frame.
Usually, when one speaks of a currency pair trending, the idea is that that pair has been in a definite up or down movement for the past couple of months. It may be up one day and down the next, but if you expand the chart out over the past month, there is a clear direction the pair is heading.
Once you've identified the trend, you have to decide if you're ready to follow it. It may be the case that a pair has been trending down for the last couple of months but is just at a point it has reached several times during the last year but has failed to breach. It may very well be ready to reverse, or it could break through and head to a new low.
The key for all trend following, as it really is for trading in general, is good money management and the ability to control your risk. Trend following feels great when it goes according to plan, and you may soon become overconfident in your trading and throw every bit of funds towards the trade. Unfortunately, the market is a wily beast, and it seems to know just when to make a dramatic turn--swiping your money right off the table.
How advantage form trend?
To really take advantage of trend following in currency trading, you should really get to know a currency pair well--understanding the particular characteristics that make that pair unique. For example, some currency pairs tend to trend more often than others, while some range up and down for the most part. Learn your pair and then make well-calculated trades. Keep your risk to a minimum, and be prepared to manage your money well.