If I would have “bet the farm” on my short USD trades some days ago – I’d be fairly deep under water. The USD has continued to rise in the face of rising equity prices – and for the most part will likely have broken every “short USD” trade out there in the process. I don’t trade that way – I don’t “bet farms”.
Considering the weakness in JPY and the 9% account profits I’ve generated there – I can’t complain. Regardless….the point being – If you see a trade idea developing, and decide to get involved – place small orders in the direction of the momentum.
In the case of JPY for example – I had several orders waiting several pips “above” the current price action day-to-day. If indeed the momentum continued in my favor – more and more orders would be picked up – but more importantly – ONLY IN THE DIRECTION OF THE MOMENTUM. When looking to short USD I “had” several orders waiting underneath day-to-day price action with “hopes” of getting filled. As the USD continued to move against me – no problem as I’ve got next to no “immediate exposure”.
I had posted /suggested getting long the EUR/USD pair at 1.3170 some time ago. Well……I’m not going to enter the market at that level IF PRICE IS IN A DOWNTREND – why get involved when a trade is moving opposite your interests? But I “may” decide to take the trade once price action has turned – and I see the same value of 1.3170 – BUT WHEN PRICE IS MOVING HIGHER!
So – In staggering your orders, you afford yourself additional time to evaluate the trade – and access your ideas….without commiting such resources that the trade “must move in your direction or you’re toast”. Sure you might miss a pip or two but that’s not the point. Why get involved with price – when price is still moving against you?
Small orders over time – will keep you in the game….betting the farm won’t.
Scaling Into Positions: The Professional’s Approach to Risk Management
Understanding Momentum vs. Counter-Trend Psychology
The biggest mistake retail traders make is fighting the tape. They see EUR/USD drop 200 pips and think “it’s oversold” – then they load up on long positions while the momentum is still screaming lower. This is financial suicide. When I talk about waiting for momentum to shift before entering at your target level, I’m talking about reading price action like a professional. If you wanted to buy EUR/USD at 1.3170 but price is grinding lower through 1.3200, 1.3185, 1.3175 – you don’t jump in front of that freight train. You wait. Maybe price hits 1.3150, finds support, and starts climbing back. Now when it reaches your 1.3170 level again, you’re buying WITH the momentum, not against it. The difference is night and day in terms of probability of success.
The Dollar Strength Paradigm Shift
What we’re witnessing with USD strength despite rising equities represents a fundamental shift in market dynamics. Traditionally, risk-on environments see money flowing out of the dollar and into higher-yielding currencies and emerging markets. But we’re in a different beast now. The dollar is acting as both a safe haven AND a growth currency simultaneously. This happens when U.S. economic fundamentals are genuinely outperforming the rest of the world. Europe is dealing with energy crises, China’s facing property market implosions, and Japan is stuck in their endless deflation trap. Meanwhile, the U.S. labor market remains robust and corporate earnings are holding up. This creates a scenario where DXY can push higher even when SPX is rallying – something that breaks traditional correlation models and wipes out traders positioned for the old playbook.
Building Positions Like a Pyramid
My scaling approach isn’t just about risk management – it’s about maximizing profit potential when you’re right. Take my JPY short strategy that generated those 9% account gains. I didn’t wake up one morning and dump my entire risk budget into USD/JPY at 130. Instead, I had orders staged at 128.50, 129.20, 130.15, 131.40 – each representing maybe 0.5% account risk. As the yen weakness theme played out, each level got hit, building my position size as the trade moved in my favor. This is the opposite of averaging down – I’m averaging UP, adding to winners while maintaining strict position sizing discipline. The beauty is that your average entry price improves as momentum continues, and your conviction grows with each successful fill.
Reading Central Bank Policy Through Price Action
Currency movements aren’t random – they’re discounting future monetary policy shifts months in advance. The JPY weakness I capitalized on wasn’t just technical analysis; it was recognizing that the Bank of Japan was trapped in their yield curve control policy while the Fed was aggressively tightening. That interest rate differential had to express itself somewhere, and JPY was the release valve. Similarly, the persistent USD strength despite equity rallies is telling us something about relative monetary policy expectations. Markets are pricing in the possibility that Fed tightening will be more durable than ECB or BOJ policy shifts. When you’re scaling into positions, you’re not just managing risk – you’re giving yourself time to read these macro tea leaves properly. Each unfilled order is information. If my EUR/USD long orders at lower levels aren’t getting hit, maybe the dollar strength story has more legs than I initially thought.
The key insight here is that professional trading isn’t about being right on direction – it’s about being right on timing and sizing. You can have the correct fundamental view on a currency pair and still lose money if you size too aggressively or enter at the wrong time within the larger trend. My scaling methodology solves both problems simultaneously. It keeps you alive when you’re early or wrong, and it maximizes profits when your thesis unfolds exactly as planned. This isn’t about missing a few pips on entry – it’s about building a sustainable approach that compounds account growth over years, not days.
What position do you still have open right now? Just wondering.
I’ve still got a couple “short usd” positions via USD/CAD as well AUD/USD. Otherwise – I am hanging out more long commods vs JPY orders ABOVE current action after booking profits on the entire trade.
Great blog advice Kong – I’m learning !
Keep on Rolo – that’s great. Keeping your orders small to start – (real small) lets you see/trade things in real time – and not run the risk of getting cleaned out.
As well “nailing” an exact price level where things will turn is 100% totally and absolutely – impossible.
Keep up the good work.
Like the way you think. Wish you had this blog started 2 yrs ago. Would have saved me a lot of trouble. Looking forward to your subscription setup. My usd based shorts not going anywhere so far. Waiting.
Thanx Nfxtrader!
Lots more to come here! We’ll see where we are at IN 2 years!
So far it’s been alot of fun – also a pile of work.
Thanks for the support.