Kamis, 04 Desember 2008

CARA MELAKUKAN ORDER

Untuk melakukan perintah order anda dapat menekan tombol F9 atau dengan meng-click kanan di layar Market Watch lalu pilih New Order, setelah itu akan muncul layar seperti dibawah ini :



Anda bisa melakukan order dengan Instant Execution (order dengan harga saat sekarang) ataupun dengan Pending Order (order yang akan terlaksana jika menyentuh suatu titik harga tertentu yang sebelumnya anda pesan terlebih dahulu).

Untuk Tampilan Menu Pending Order :



Di menu order ini terdapat beberapa macam kolom yaitu :

  • Kolom Symbol yaitu jenis pasangan instrument (mata uang) yang ingin anda tradingkan
  • Kolom volume yang dimana adalah jumlah lot yang ingin anda input, dan bila anda input volumenya dengan 1.00, maka itu berarti anda bertransaksi 1 lot, untuk Forex margin yang diperlukan untuk 1 lot = Rp.6.000.000 (enam juta rupiah) atau sam dengan $1000, dengan asumsi $1=Rp.6.000 (Fix rate). Account yang diterpakan yaitu Regular Account dengan contract size = 100.000.
  • Kolom Stop Loss & Take Profit , yaitu kolom untuk pengisian Stop Loss atau untuk membatasi kerugian anda, dan Take Profit yaitu target untuk profit anda.
  • Kolom Comment yaitu bila anda ingin memberikan catatan kecil untuk posisi order anda ini
  • Kolom Type yaitu jenis order anda, apakah ingin dieksekusi langsung saat itu juga (instant execution) atau dengan pending order
  • Tombol Buy & Sell, yaitu anda ingin order dengan Buy atau Sell (untuk instant execution) , dan bila order anda Buy maka akan dieksekusi di harga Ask, sedangkan untuk Sell adalah di harga Bid.
  • Maximum Deviation yaitu untuk batasan toleransi slippage bila harga tiba-tiba melompat maka jarak berapa dari harga yang melompat tersebut yang bisa anda toleransi untuk eksekusi order anda. (default: 0)

Kolom Type untuk Pending Order , yaitu jenis pending order apa yang anda inginkan, adapun jenisnya-jenisnya yaitu :

  • Buy Limit: Yaitu memasang order Buy dengan harga dibawah harga running sekarang, dengan harapan jika harga yang sedang turun tersebut dapat bergerak naik lagi dari titik posisi harga Pending Buy Limit tersebut untuk mendapatkan profit
  • Buy Stop: Yaitu memasang order Buy dengan harga diatas harga running sekarang, dengan harapan jika harga bergerak naik lagi dari titik posisi harga pending Buy Stop tersebut maka anda akan mendapatkan profit
  • Sell Limit: Yaitu memasang order Sell dengan harga diatas harga running sekarang, dengan harapan jika harga yang sedang naik tersebut dapat bergerak turun lagi dari titik posisi harga Pending Sell Limit tersebut untuk mendapatkan profit
  • Sell Stop: Yaitu memasang order Sell dengan harga dibawah harga running sekarang, dengan harapan jika harga bergerak turun lagi dari titik posisi harga pending Sell Stop tersebut maka anda akan mendapatkan profit

Kolom At Price, yaitu harga pending order anda, yang dimana order akan terlaksana jika menyentuh/melewati titik harga tersebut sesuai dengan jenis “Type” nya Kolom

Kolom Expiry, yaitu bila order pending anda tidak terlaksana hingga waktu tertentu, maka pending order anda akan otomatis dibatalkan oleh system (jam di kolom ini mengikuti jam server dari layar Market Watch)

CATATAN:

Jika di menu order anda ada bertuliskan “Open price you set must differ from market price by at least 30 pips” itu berarti jarak order anda harus berjarak minimum 30 point dari harga market, dan bila kurang dari 30 pips maka order anda akan invalid dan tidak bisa masuk.




Hal-hal Mengenai Candlestick


• Dibuat pada abad 17 oleh trader Jepang untuk membaca harga komoditi
• Merupakan chart paling representatif dan paling banyak dipakai
• Informasi yang diberikan : Highest - Lowest price, Open, Close, Bullish / Bearish pattern

Kamis, 30 Oktober 2008

Understanding Margin

Understanding Margin

Trading currencies on margin lets you increase your buying power. Here's a simplified example: If you have $2,000 cash in a margin account that allows 100:1 leverage, you could purchase up to $200,000 worth of currency-because you only have to post 1% of the purchase price as collateral. Another way of saying this is that you have $200,000 in buying power.
Benefits of Margin

With more buying power, you can increase your total return on investment with less cash outlay. To be sure, trading on margin magnifies your profits AND your losses.

Here's a hypothetical example that demonstrates the upside of trading on margin:

With a US$5,000 balance in your margin account, you decide that the US Dollar (USD) is undervalued against the Swiss Franc (CHF).

To execute this strategy, you must buy Dollars (simultaneously selling Francs), and then wait for the exchange rate to rise.

The current bid/ask price for USD/CHF is 1.6322/1.6327 (meaning you can buy $1 US for 1.6327 Swiss Francs or sell $1 US for 1.6322)

Your available leverage is 100:1 or 1%. You execute the trade, buying a one lot: buying 100,000 US dollars and selling 163,270 Swiss Francs.

At 100:1 leverage, your initial margin deposit for this trade is $1,000. Your account balance is now $4000.

As you expected, USD/CHF rises to 1.6435/40. You can now sell $1 US for 1.6435 Francs or buy $1 US for 1.6440 Francs. Since you're long dollars (and are short francs), you must now sell dollars and buy back the francs to realize any profit.

You close out the position, selling one lot (selling 100,000 US dollar and receiving 164,350 CHF) Since you originally sold (paid) 163,270 CHF, your profit is 1080 CHF.

To calculate your P&L in terms of US dollars, simply divide 1080 by the current USD/CHF rate of 1.6435. Your profit on this trade is $657.13
Summary

Initial Investment: $1000

Profit :$657.13

Return on investment: 65.7%

If you had executed this trade without using leverage, your return on investment would be less than 1%.
Managing a Margin Account

Trading on margin can be a profitable investment strategy, but it's important that you take the time to understand the risks.
You should make sure you fully understand how your margin account works. Be sure to read the margin agreement between you and your clearing firm. Talk to your account representative if you have any questions.
The positions in your account could be partially or totally liquidated should the available margin in your account fall below a predetermined threshold.
You may not receive a margin call before your positions are liquidated.

You should monitor your margin balance on a regular basis and utilize stop-loss orders on every open position to limit downside risk.

12 Golden Rules for Successful Trading

12 Golden Rules for Successful Trading

1. Adopt a definite trading plan.

Because of the emotional stress that is inherent in any speculative situation, you must have a predetermined method of operation, which includes a set of rules by which you operate and adhere to, thus protecting you from yourself. Very often, your emotions will tell you to do something totally foreign or negative to what your market trading plan should be. It is only by adhering to a preconceived formula that you can resist the emotional temptations and stresses that are constantly present in a speculative situation.
2. If you're not sure, don't trade.

If you're in a trade and feel unsure of yourself, take your loss or protect your profit with a stop. If you are unsure of a position, you will be influenced by a multitude of extraneous and unimportant details and will probably end up taking a loss.
3. You should be able to be right 40% of the time and still show handsome profits.

In speculating, it would be folly to expect to be right every time. An individual with the proper trading techniques should be able to cut his losses short and let his profits run so that even being right less than half the time will show excellent profits. This point is re-emphasized in Rule Four.
4. Cut your losses and let your profits ride.

The basic failing of most speculators is that they put a limit on their profits and no limit on their losses. A man hates to admit he's wrong. Therefore, an individual will often let his loss ride, becoming larger and larger in hopes that eventually the market will turn around and prove him correct. Then after a while, he begins hoping for a small loss and gives up hoping for a profit. Human nature also dictates that an individual wants to take his profit right away and thus prove himself correct. There is an old saying, "You never go broke taking a small profit." But you'll certainly never get rich that way. Being satisfied with small profits is the wrong mental approach for making money in speculation. If you are correct when entering a speculative situation, you will know it almost immediately and will show a profit quickly. However, if you are wrong, you will show a loss and you should remove yourself from the situation quickly. Taking a small loss does not necessarily mean you were wrong in your thinking. It simply means that your timing was perhaps incorrect and that you should wait for the correct timing and situation to allow you to reenter the market. Remember, in any speculative situation, the market is the final judge. An individual must let the market tell him when he is wrong and when he is right. If you show a profit, ride it until the market turns around and tells you that you are no longer right, and, at that time, you should get out...but not before! On the other hand, the market will also tell you if you are wrong and it would be a serious mistake to argue with what it is saying.
5. If you cannot afford to lose, you cannot afford to win.

As we have stated in Rule Four, losing is a natural part of trading. If you are not in a position to accept losses, either psychologically or financially, you have no business trading. In addition, trading should be done only with surplus funds that are not vital to daily expenses.
6. Don't trade too many markets.

It is difficult to successfully trade and understand a specific market. It is next to impossible for an individual, especially a beginner, to be successful in several markets at the same time. The fundamental, technical, and psychological information necessary to trade successfully in more than a few markets is more than the individual has either the time or ability to accumulate.
7. Don't trade in a market that is too thin.

A lack of public participation in a market will make it difficult, if not impossible, to liquidate a position at anywhere near the price you want.
8. Be aware of the trend. ("The Trend is your friend")

It is vitally important that a trader be aware of a strong force in the market, either bullish or bearish. When this force is at its height, it would be folly to attempt to buck it. However, one must learn to recognize when a trend is about to run its course or is near a period of exhaustion. By an ability to recognize the early signs of exhaustion, the trader will protect himself from staying in the market too long and will be able to change direction when the trend changes.
9. Don't attempt to buy the bottom or sell the top.

It simply can't be done unless you have the aid of a crystal ball or some other tool which could be peculiar to the mystic. Be content to wait for the trend to develop and then take advantage of it once it has been established.
10. Never answer a margin call.

This rule acts as a stop loss when your position has weakened considerably. By dogmatically and arbitrarily adhering to this rule, you will be forced to get out of the market before disaster sets it. It is often difficult to admit you're wrong and get out of the market (which you probably should have done well before you received a margin call). However, the presence of a margin call should act as a final warning that you have let your position go as far as you conceivably can (unless the initial margin is out of line with the volatility of the contract).
11. You can usually sell the first rally or buy the first break.

Generally, a market which has just established a trend either up or down will have a reaction and good interim profits can be made by recognizing this reaction and taking advantage of it. For example, in a bull market, the first reaction will generally be met by investors waiting to buy the break. This support generally causes the market to rally. The reverse is true of a bear market.
12. Never straddle a loss.

A loss by itself is difficult enough to accept. However, to lock in this loss, thus making it necessary for you to be right twice rather than the once (which you previously found impossible) is sheer absurdity.

While the following are not specific trading rules, they are general observations which will aid the speculator in formulating an understanding of markets:

You must retain control of the situation and yourself. Do not allow your position to control you. It is a mistake to find yourself in a position larger than you can reasonable handle. When this occurs, you will find that the sheer size of the position, rather than the facts of the situation itself, affects your judgment.

The commodity does not know that you own it. You must remain impersonal in your trading. When you take a position and you are wrong, remember it is better to get out immediately! The market will not feel badly about it if you do, but you will if you don't.

The market always looks its worst at its bottom, and the best at the top. It is important to remember that before the market turns around, it is at its very worst. Therefore, be prepared to treat each day objectively by not allowing the emotional fever to carry over and cloud your judgment.

Equity...Equity...Equity...Not Cash. If a man is long from 100 points below the market and you are long from the opening that day, you both had the same amount invested in the market from the time both of you were long. Therefore, if the market goes up ten points, you each have made the same amount that day. If the market goes down 10 points, you have each lost the same amount. You should not be confused by the fact that someone has taken a position before you. You must be concerned with your own situation primarily. Each day, start fresh. Your paper profits or losses from previous days should not enter into your decisions regarding the course of action you will take.

Treat paper profits as if they are your own money. They are! Naturally, the opposite also holds true.