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đź’ˇ IDEAS Breaking Down How To Trade a FX Trading Pattern

Today, we're going to walk-through four components that will help you become a more effective pattern trader in the Forex market to boost your trading plan. First, we’d like to deconstruct the pattern and to discuss what information is communicated via the different patterns whether it is a continuation or a reversal pattern. As we noted before, continuation patterns or a more favorable approach to trading is the probability of playing out is going to be higher than a reversal pattern.

Deconstructing the pattern will help you grasp what specifically were looking for in the pattern in terms of highs, lows, and sentiment or corresponding news releases.

Secondly, were going to discuss pattern selection, which is going to nail down what is most important to being a competent pattern trader. As with most things, there is an 80 – 20 rule where as 20% of what you learn here will provide 80% of the results. In other words, there are a few key components that we must select to focus on to decide whether a pattern is worth trading. Advanced selection will help you decipher what is important versus what is not important. While this may sound simple I can tell you from many years of live trading experience as well as discussing trading in real time with traders every week that a lot of traders unintentionally as opposed to more important ideas, which we will discuss.

Third, were to take a look at sequencing in order to help us put the process in the right order. Just like any good cooking recipe if you do not follow the right order or sequence then your process can be thrown off mark.

It may feel like were skipping some parts but in relation to the selection criteria mentioned earlier, we will skip over less important components that do not affect the overall pattern and likely subsequent move that were going to be focusing on trading.

Lastly, were going to look at trading risk and where a trade has gone wrong. It may help you to know up front that the absolute cleanest patterns you’ll ever see often do not work out. The reason they do not work out has less to do with the price pattern and more to do with the subsequent patterns we discussed in the selection component. Where many traders, including myself, have to fight the mental giant of greed is when you recognize a clean pattern, enter a trade based on that pattern, and then when the price starts to move against your expectation you hold on believing that the pattern will eventually play itself out. Of course, the market does not have to do anything and sometimes failed patterns provide stronger moves against the anticipated direction of the pattern so that fighting the new move on a failed pattern becomes very costly.

A helpful mental tip is to recognize how high the stakes become for failure when you hold a losing trade. High stakes effectively means that your risk of run increases significantly when you either over leverage or light a losing trade take more from you then you should allow any trade to take from you.

Prediction and elections module: how did Nate Silver predict 50 out of 50 states correctly in the 2012 U.S. presidential election, and 49 out of 50 correctly in the 2008 election? How much of that was luck? We will discuss how to find, process, combine, visualize, simulate, and summarize election-related data and questions, especially if there are conflicting polls with different reliabilities.

We hope this process of deconstructing the pattern, selecting what’s important to focus on most often, setting up a sequential process of what to focus on when, and recognizing the harm you are doing to yourself and your accounts future by failing to practice money management allows you to get the most out of pattern trading.
 
Currency Devaluation: Bold Strategy or Just Playing with Fire?

Alright, let’s get real about currency devaluation. People toss the term around like it’s some magical economic hack—just slash the value of your currency and boom, your exports are flying off the shelves and everyone’s rolling in cash. Honestly, if only stuff worked out that neatly. Spoiler: it doesn’t.

### Devaluation = Inflation Headache

First thing that slaps you in the face after devaluing your currency? Inflation, baby. Your money buys less, so everything from iPhones to imported cheese gets pricier. Sure, a little inflation can make folks spend before money loses more value, but let that monster off the leash and suddenly people can’t afford basics. That’s not exactly a vibe anyone’s going for.

### Exporters Cheer, Everyone Else—Not So Much

Here’s the thing: yeah, exporters are probably stoked when a country’s currency drops. Suddenly their stuff looks like a bargain at global markets. Ask the Eurozone or Japan, circa 2011–2015—they went all-in on this. The yen tanked, the euro slid—brands like Sony or BMW probably sent thank you cards. But what about everyone else? Local businesses needing foreign parts get squeezed hard, and regular people foot the bill at the cash register.

Plus, and this is a big one, fiddling with currency rarely fixes the underlying issue. If people think your economy sucks, they’re still not gonna dump their money into your stock market. No matter how cheap your currency looks on paper.

### More Than Just Pushin’ Buttons

So what’s the plan with devaluation, anyway? Basically, make your stuff cheaper for foreigners. But it doesn’t exactly wave a magic wand and solve deeper problems. Remember "Abenomics?" Japan threw everything it could at the wall—easy money, public spending, reforms. The weaker yen helped exports, sure, but it didn’t get people at home spending or kick Japan out of its economic funk.

China’s play in August 2015? Letting the yuan float a bit more ended up spooking everyone. Nobody knew if it was a minor adjustment or the start of something wilder. Markets kinda freaked out—and for good reason.

### When Devaluation Gets Contagious: Currency Wars

Here's where it gets messy. One country drops its currency value, suddenly others wanna play too, just to keep up. Soon, it’s like a bunch of kids racing to the bottom of the pool to grab the same coin. Economists have a cute name for it—“currency war”—but it’s more like economic dodgeball, and nobody wins. What starts as a short-term export boost can just blow up into trade fights and market chaos.

### Lessons from the Last Five Years—or, Nobody’s Figured It Out

Last half-decade? It’s been a wild ride. Quantitative easing in Europe. Switzerland waving goodbye to its Franc peg and causing a global freakout. Japan hitting the devalue button over and over. Every strategy came with a mix of hope and headaches. No magic bullet, just new problems piled on old ones.

Bottom line? Devaluation isn’t a golden ticket. Use it with caution, maybe as part of a bigger playbook. But if a country’s whole plan is just to keep making its money worth less…well, good luck not digging yourself into an economic crater.
 

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