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Today’s active investors and traders have access to a growing number of trading instruments, from tried-and-true blue chip stocks to the fast-paced futures and foreign exchange (or forex) markets.
Deciding which of these markets to trade can be complicated, and many factors need to be considered in order to make the best choice.
The most important element may be the trader’s or investor’s risk tolerance and trading style.
For example, buy-and-hold investors are often more suited to participating in the stock market, while short-term traders—including swing, day and scalp traders—may prefer forex whose price volatility is more pronounced.
Strategy is very important
What is a trading strategy?
A trading strategy is a plan that employs analysis to identify specific market conditions and price levels. While fundamental analysis can be used to predict price movements, most strategies focus on specific technical indicators.
What is the difference between trading strategy and trading style?
Although there is a lot of confusion between ‘style’ and ‘strategy’, there are some important differences that every trader should know. While a trading style is an overarching plan for how often you’ll trade, and how long you’ll keep positions open for, a strategy is a very specific methodology for defining at which price points you’ll enter and exit trades.
Trend trading
A trend trading strategy relies on using technical analysis to identify the direction of market momentum.
Range trading
Range trading is a strategy that seeks to take advantage of consolidating markets
Breakout trading
Breakout trading is the strategy of entering a given trend as early as possible, ready for the price to ‘break out’ of its range.
Reversal trading
The reversal trading strategy is based on identifying when a current trend is going to change direction.
Momentum
Momentum trading strategy is based on price trends and the direction they’re taking.
Pairs trading
Pairs trading is finding the correlated pair of instruments where the valuation relationship has gone out of whack, buying under-priced instruments and the selling the overpriced ones.