{"id":646251,"date":"2024-12-04T16:00:04","date_gmt":"2024-12-04T15:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/?p=646251"},"modified":"2024-12-04T16:12:23","modified_gmt":"2024-12-04T15:12:23","slug":"dont-take-risks-at-the-end-of-the-trading-period","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/en\/dont-take-risks-at-the-end-of-the-trading-period\/","title":{"rendered":"Don’t take risks at the end of the trading period"},"content":{"rendered":"
In the next part of our series on successful FTMO Traders, we will look at a trader who focused on one selected instrument, which may seem like the ideal approach in the long run. However, he took unnecessary risks at the end of the trading period, which really didn’t pay off.<\/em><\/p>\n Some traders are comfortable with trading multiple instruments within an asset class (equities, indices, commodities, forex), some may benefit from diversification between different types of investment instruments, and others may focus solely on one instrument.<\/p>\n For many traders, the latter approach is the ideal way to perfectly master a given market and thus become a specialist in trading that instrument. The advantage of this approach is that the trader is not distracted by following numerous markets. On the other hand, it is true that more instruments can offer the trader more opportunities. Each approach has its advantages and disadvantages, so it depends on what suits the trader.<\/p>\n Our trader is obviously comfortable with the approach of trading only one instrument, and in his case it is the most popular among FTMO Traders, i.e. gold (XAUUSD). As you can see from the balance curve, the trader had a great start, then his progression stalled for a few days, only to pick up nicely in the second half of the period, and eventually give away some of his profits a bit unnecessarily.<\/p>\n The total return of nearly $12,000 is very good. While that doesn’t look too staggering in a $200,000 account, what’s more important is the ability to make similar returns over the long term. A large account gives the trader the opportunity to earn relatively large returns, although in percentage terms they may not be large numbers.<\/p>\n The trader had no problem with the loss limits, so it is clear that he does not take unnecessary risks and thanks to the good consistency of his trades he is able to easily reach a profit of over $10,000. His problem, however, is the vice of many traders who want to achieve a higher return at any cost and sometimes fail to do so at the end of the trading period. And because they want to make up for these unnecessary losses, they open more and more trades and in the worst case, they may still exceed one of the loss limits at the end of the period and make trading unnecessarily complicated. Our trader avoided this black scenario, but we cannot praise him for it.<\/p>\n The trader’s statistics are not bad at all, the average RRR above 2 is very good and the win rate of around 50% is not bad either. Unfortunately, if it wasn’t for the last two days it could have been much better, especially in terms of trade win rate. In total, the trader executed 29 trades in eight days for a total size of 169 lots.<\/p>\n Considering the trader’s style, this is not that many trades, with the trader opening 6 lots each time (except for the first 1 lot). This can be advantageous when the trader is a scalper and does not have time to deal with a different position size on each trade. On the other hand, it can be restrictive when the trader needs to set a wider Stop Loss, which may be too large in money terms at the given size.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
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