Buy On Weakness – Sell On Strength

For those of us already “in the trade” – congratulations. One of the most difficult things for a new trader to learn to do ( and also one… essential for success) is to “buy into weakness” – and “sell into strength”. I know it  sounds crazy, if not completely insane to the newcomer but…you gotta get your head wrapped around it in order to succeed. You gotta think like the big boys.

For most (wary of the current market conditions – and perhaps angry, frustrated – or even half clean out by the 2008 crash etc) its is extremely difficult to trade / invest when….for the most part it’s a crap shoot at best. Day to-day news of collapse…or war….or you name it really – has really taken a bit out of the average investors confidence in the market.

So…you see a big “up day” and you think “hey things are turning…I think Im gonna buy” – or the inverse “oooh – red day….I better sit tight and see how this plays out” – then oddly…….get smoked doing either! The buyer on green…..wakes up the following morning to a sea of red…a losing position…. and a broken heart. The “sitter” on red….wakes up the next morning to “Dow up 300!” – stocks through the roof, and an angry wife saying “well  then!  – why didn’t you buy? – damn!”.

In general, lets look at it this way. On “green days” wallstreet fat  cats with more money and stock than god are SELLING YOU STOCK ( as grandma and grandpa hear of the euphoria..and assume the time is right ). The wallstreet gang already owns the stock – at much lower prices – and sees this opportunity to SELL – as new participants enter the market with dreams of their own private island.On “red days” wallstreet fat cat with more money than god are BUYING YOUR STOCK – as newbies completely freak out – sell like there’s no tomorrow, and again turn to face the wrath of their “oh so loving wives” with a loss….. from the trade they “so confidently” placed days earlier.

Anyway….I could go on.Point being – in order to play with the big boys – you gotta flip this thing upside down -you gotta buy on weakness….and in turn….sell on strength.

Short of that – I can only imagine – there’s whole lot of pissed off wives out there – continually hearing of “trades gone wrong” from  “mr. know it all” sitting ‘cross the kitchen table. Thankfully – Im still single.

The Psychology Behind Institutional Trading Patterns

Reading Market Sentiment Like a Pro

Here’s the thing most retail traders don’t get – the forex market is a giant sentiment machine, and understanding this psychological warfare is what separates the wheat from the chaff. When EUR/USD is getting hammered and everyone’s screaming about European debt crisis, that’s precisely when the smart money starts accumulating long positions. Why? Because they know fear creates the best buying opportunities. The retail crowd sees USD strength and thinks “dollar rally forever” – meanwhile, institutional players are quietly building massive EUR positions at discount prices. They’re not emotional. They’re not panicking. They’re calculating.

Take the Swiss National Bank intervention back in 2015. Retail traders were long EUR/CHF because “the peg was safe” – right up until it wasn’t. The pros? They were already positioned short, reading the writing on the wall through interest rate differentials and SNB balance sheet data. While amateur traders lost their shirts, institutional money made fortunes. The lesson? When everyone feels comfortable and safe, start looking for the exit. When everyone’s terrified and selling, start building your positions.

Currency Correlations and Smart Money Moves

Professional traders don’t just look at one currency pair in isolation – they’re watching the entire ecosystem. When crude oil tanks and USD/CAD starts ripping higher, novice traders see momentum and want to chase that move. But the pros? They’re already eyeing CAD strength setups, knowing that oversold conditions in oil-dependent currencies create mean reversion opportunities. They understand that extreme moves in commodity currencies like AUD, NZD, and CAD often reverse sharply once the initial panic subsides.

Consider this scenario: risk-off sentiment hits, JPY strengthens across the board, and retail traders pile into yen pairs thinking the safe-haven trade will continue indefinitely. Meanwhile, institutional traders are monitoring intervention levels, knowing that extreme yen strength hurts Japanese exports. They’re preparing for the inevitable policy response or natural reversion. They’re not following the crowd – they’re positioning ahead of it. This is why USD/JPY often sees violent reversals from extreme levels. The big boys know these levels matter.

Interest Rate Differentials and Forward Positioning

While retail traders obsess over daily price action, institutional players are positioning months ahead based on central bank policy divergence. When the Fed signals hawkish intent and everyone’s buying dollars on every dip, that’s your signal to start thinking about dollar weakness. Why? Because markets discount the future, not the present. By the time rate hikes actually happen, the dollar move is often exhausted.

Look at GBP/USD during major Bank of England policy shifts. Retail traders wait for the actual rate decision, then chase the move. Professional traders are positioned weeks in advance, reading inflation data, employment figures, and forward guidance. They buy cable when it looks weakest – when Brexit fears are peaking or when UK economic data disappoints. They sell when retail sentiment turns bullish and everyone’s talking about pound recovery. They’re not smarter – they’re just thinking differently about time horizons and market efficiency.

Volume and Liquidity: The Hidden Game

Here’s what separates institutional trading from retail gambling: understanding when markets actually matter. Most retail traders don’t realize that their 2 AM trade entry during Asian session might hit their stop simply due to thin liquidity, not genuine market direction. Professional traders know that major moves happen during overlap periods – London/New York specifically – when real volume and institutional flow drive price action.

They also understand that Friday afternoon positions often reverse on Sunday night gaps, not because of fundamental changes, but because of position squaring and weekend risk management. This is why you’ll see smart money fade strong Friday closes or support obvious weekend gaps. They’re not predicting the future – they’re understanding market mechanics that retail traders ignore.

The bottom line? Stop thinking like a retail trader reacting to price movement. Start thinking like institutional money – positioning ahead of obvious moves, understanding that extreme sentiment creates opportunity, and remembering that when trading feels easy and obvious, you’re probably about to get schooled. The market rewards contrarian thinking and punishes herd mentality. Choose your side wisely.

9 Responses

  1. hf November 11, 2012 / 10:33 pm

    lol !!
    great post
    i shoulda coulda woulda found your blog a long time ago 🙂

    • Forex Kong November 11, 2012 / 10:49 pm

      Hey man……thanx for the support.

      Im just calling it like I see it.

  2. DojiTrader November 12, 2012 / 8:13 am

    Hi Forex Kong,

    This is where a system comes in – so that it guides one’s behaviour.

    Like – buying after a downtrend on a doji/hammer, or selling on a falling star after a rise – or lighten up when price action is outside the Bollinger bands on an uptrend – or buying after a down-trend (“crash-trade”).

    Now, once one has a system, that has been tested and found to perform “adequately” for one’s expectations, then one needs to learn to follow it – which is a matter of trust. This is easier said then done – and experience will be the teacher (“it’s better to follow my system than it is to trade on gut feel”).

    I am usually OK buying-wise, but (still) a lot worse selling-wise – not always following my own rules (“this time it’s going to go to the moon!!”), and frequently giving away 50% or more of the paper profits!

    • Forex Kong November 12, 2012 / 3:09 pm

      Exactly Dojitrader.

      No matter how long one has been doing this – capturing “every penny” of a given move is all but impossible.At best, we try to get what we can, and keep ourselves protected while doing it. Myself for example – If I “miss a turn” – I have a very hard time with entry as noted above – in that after Ive seen 2 or 3 days of green I feel that it may be too late…and Im sure to get wacked chasing it..

      Having confidence in the larger picture / longer term however – does correct the smallest of timing mistakes with entry.

  3. Ben November 12, 2012 / 3:33 pm

    Kong – you entered NUGT calls this morning. Is the main difference between NUGT, GDX, and GLD just a matter of leverage?

    • Forex Kong November 12, 2012 / 4:54 pm

      Yes Ben…NUGT is a 3X bullish ETF – highly leveraged, highly volatile….highly dangerous.

      If one gets the timing wrong here – usual stops are out the window etc….as well – smaller postion size would be recommended.

      • Ben November 12, 2012 / 4:56 pm

        Thanks. I can certainly see the need for more precision timing with something like that.

  4. hf November 12, 2012 / 8:41 pm

    added : march XLK calls 28s @ 1.30 and some IDU shares @ 84.80

    • Forex Kong November 12, 2012 / 8:50 pm

      I can only assume you are going to be one happy trader here in coming days. Again…great patience….and great entry in my view.

      Nice work….really nice work.

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