{"id":547348,"date":"2023-04-14T14:00:19","date_gmt":"2023-04-14T12:00:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/?p=547348"},"modified":"2023-05-23T15:53:31","modified_gmt":"2023-05-23T13:53:31","slug":"ftmo-traders-analysis-focused-on-consistency","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/en\/ftmo-traders-analysis-focused-on-consistency\/","title":{"rendered":"FTMO Traders Analysis: focused on consistency"},"content":{"rendered":"
In the next part of our irregular series, in which we evaluate successful FTMO Traders, we will take a look at two traders who managed to achieve great profits thanks to their consistent approach.<\/em><\/p>\n The first trader earned a very nice 8.3% profit for the month, but did not avoid a rather long period when his account was in loss. However, thanks to the great consistency score of 86%, he managed to overcome this period and finished the trading period with a great profit on his account.<\/p>\n Over \u20ac13,000 of profit achieved in one month is a very good result. Although the trader “attacked” the Maximum Daily Loss limit during the trading period, he managed to get out of the drawdown quite successfully. As far as the maximum loss limit is concerned, he still had enough margin there.<\/p>\n We are of the positive opinion of the RRR (Reward-Risk-Ratio) of 1.58, which would normally indicate that the trader\u2019s strategy should be profitable in the long run. Thus, the success rate of trades below 50% (46.81%) does not bother us either. The trader opened 94 positions in 20 trading days, which is almost 5 positions per day. What is interesting is that the two days when he opened the most positions were his worst losing days. The total size of 440.13 lots means a little over 4.5 lots per position, which is a rather conservative approach for an account size of \u20ac160,000.<\/p>\n The Trading Journal shows that in most cases the trader opens positions with Stop Losses and Take Profits set, which is obviously a good approach to limit unnecessarily large losses during unforeseen market movements. The loss per trade only exceeded 2% in one case, usually it is around 0.5 – 1% , which also shows a consistent approach and well set risk management rules. The trader rarely holds trades overnight and the longest trades last a few hours, so this is a classic case of an intraday trader and the trader does not lose swap fees unnecessarily as a result. The trader uses a relatively large group of instruments in his trading, but only one asset class is used, which is the currency pairs. Of course, there is nothing wrong with this, quite the opposite. Being able to follow the developments on almost 20 currency pairs can sometimes be difficult and trying to diversify can be rather counterproductive in such cases. For pairs that are long-term losers, the trader might then consider whether they are actually suitable for the chosen strategy. The ratio of buy and sell orders is also rarely balanced, so there is nothing wrong in this respect either.<\/p>\n The second trader also did not avoid a losing period and his curve has a much more volatile course at first glance. However, thanks to his consistent approach (score of 81%), he was able to overcome even relatively large fluctuations and made a high profit. The final result is clearly better than the result of the first trader in terms of percentage and the profit amount.<\/p>\n This trader also came dangerously close to the Maximum Daily Loss and Maximum Loss limits during the course of trading, which we cannot view positively. While a trader can set his Stop Loss so that he does not exceed the limit, an unexpected significant move after a surprising result of macroeconomic news may mean that even the SL will not protect his account in the end. In any case, a profit of over $28,000 on a $100,000 account is a very good result.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
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