Forex traders always harp about maintaining discipline and always following the trading plan.
But while having discipline is a very important trait for a trader, we also have to be wary that if we’re too stuck in our ways, we’ll end up imposing our ideas on what the market should do instead of reacting to what is actually happening.
All you really gotta do is question the market. Really, it’s that easy.
Why you ask? Well, asking questions enables you to look at different perspectives of the market that you initially may not be aware of.
When questioning your market assumptions, think outside the box and don’t just stick to simple and random questions like “What pair should I trade today?”
By questioning, I mean that you should ask what the market “should” do in light of all the information – fundamentals, technicals, and sentiment – available at that moment.
For example, you can ask a question like, “How will dollar traders act today given the dovish Fed statement we saw yesterday?”
If you’re a technical trader, you can also question the market by looking at its recent price action.
For instance, we see that USD/JPY has been trading higher for the past few days as evidenced by its higher lows on the hourly timeframe.
You can ask yourself, “Is this uptrend still apparent in higher timeframes? Has it made a new high? Will it encounter any potential resistance level soon?”
If you see that USD/JPY is nearing a major psychological handle but still bouncing off support at another area of interest, you may opt to look for opportunities to scalp intraday trends rather than swing trades. Heck, this could indicate that the pair may soon consolidate. Do you really want to get stuck in that?
This practice will make you think of other potential scenarios that may emerge and enable you to become a better “listener” of the markets, rather an “imposer” of your own thoughts and views that in reality, may not mean zilch to the market.
I believe that much of the information we need to catch those good trades are already available to us. It’s just that our biases often make them unclear.
Learning to constantly question the market is not exactly scientific, but it can definitely help make us become more open to the market’s possibilities.