Being stopped out of a currency trade several times means that you have losing trades in a row. They ended up as losing trades because of a change of direction in each market rather than poor execution and that is important to know. When that happens traders automatically go into a different analytical frame of mind.

Early in s.o.'s trading career, you would be anxious to get that money back so you would move down to a shorter time frame chart and trade away. After a while, it became obvious that this "revenge trading" resulted in more losses rather than gains, so you stopped doing it.

Now you move the other direction in that you look at the daily chart to see what is happening. You assume that the wave structure on the 4-hour chart has played out and that we should start looking for a correction on the daily chart instead.

So you pick a pair that offered some solid trades and use that as your benchmark or "scout" if you will on where the markets want to go from here. You are using e.g. the EUR/GBP daily chart as that shows a potential buying opportunity. If the trends are to remain intact, this market should reverse at some point here and start to move back up. You have a trendline and Slow Stochastics plotted here to offer another way to judge this countertrend move. There are other pairs in similar situations with the USD/JPY being one example. But the key here is to get a better feel for this move and it's strength. If this is the beginning of a trend change, the market will move right through this trendline and continue to move down. At that point, you have to exercise some patience in waiting for the next trading opportunity. If you see the EUR/GBP find support and start to reverse, this could be a solid trading opportunity with a chance for a big gain. But this is the time to back off a little so we can get "in tune" with the market instead of forcing a trade.

The market will do what it wants to do in spite of what we want. It is important to remember that.
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