Monday, November 18, 2013

London Breakout Strategy



There are many variation. Below is abstracted from http://fxtradingport.blogspot.sg by an experienced forex trader and backtested on EURUSD.

Based on last 4 hourly candle prior to London opening and SMA-50.








FOREX STRATEGY #12: LONDON SESSION PROFITABLE TRADING

This strategy is adopted from a forum in a prominent forex broker. The author of the strategy provides eight-month back testing result. I have done a research on this strategy, and it looks like a simple yet great strategy to be used for intraday trading. The following is what the author elaborates on the strategy.  

With London being the most important trading center, and the one that, more often than not, sets up the trend for the rest of the day, I started looking for possible trading patterns that could give us an edge. After four failed attempts (all based on the idea of breakouts, because that's what I had in mind from the start, due to their simplicity), I finally developed a simple strategy that was showing promising results in the preliminary tests.

Preparing your charts:
  • Trade only the major currency pairs (EUR/USD, USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, etc), due to their lower spreads and less frequent price spikes.
  • Hourly candlestick chart.
  • Add a 50-period simple moving average (50 SMA), this will be our trend filter.

Entry Rules:
  • At 8:00 GMT, when the London session opens, check the highest high and the lowest low of the previous 4 candles, which are the 4, 5, 6 and 7 GMT candles.
  • Go long if the price breaches the highest high of those 4 candles and is above the 50 SMA.
  • Go short if the price breaches the lowest low of the 4, 5, 6 and 7 GMT candles and is below the 50 SMA.
  • Maximum of one trade open per day (either long or short, whichever happens first).
  • Trades are only opened if a signal is given until the end of the London session (17:00 GMT). So the last hourly candle where we can open a new position is the 16:00 one.
  • You can place your conditional orders at 8:00 GMT, this way you don't have to constantly monitor the chart nor open the position manually.
Initial stop-loss (SL):
  • If you open a long position, then the SL is always placed at the lowest low of the 4 to 7 GMT candles.
  • If you open a short position, the SL is placed at the highest high of those 4 candles.
  • No take profit orders are used.
Trailing stop-loss:
  • The initial SL is valid for the candle when the trade was filled, in subsequent bars the stop is manually moved to the lowest low or highest high of the preceding 3 candles, and updated hourly as the trade moves in our favor.
  • Example: If the current candle is the 13:00 GMT one and you are long since the 12:00 GMT bar, the stop-loss will be placed at the lowest low of the 10, 11 and 12 GMT candles
  • The trailing stop can never be lower/higher than the initial SL, it can only move in our favor.
  • The trade is closed manually at the end of the trading day (22:00 GMT) if the stop-loss has not been hit by then.
  • No take profit orders are used.
Money management and position sizing

Although you don't need to use my money management rules, you can simply trade a fixed lot size if you prefer, regardless of how wide/tight the SL is, that is something I do not recommend doing. I created a simple Excel calculator that indicates the amount to trade, based on the percentage of capital the trader wants to risk per trade, as well as the difference between the opening price and initial stop-loss. The wider the stop-loss is the smaller the position will be. This is how it looks like:


It is assumed that the trader will trade bigger when the account gets bigger (change the "account balance" in the calculator), and vice-versa in periods of losses. This way you will compound the profits and achieve a higher rate of return than if you traded the same amount all the time.

Backtesting results

Due to my almost complete inability to program anything, I did a manual (and very time-consuming) backtest of this strategy on EUR/USD for 8 months, from July 2, 2012, to February 28, 2013. 1.2 pips were taken from each position, for spread and commissions, and the risk per trade was 3% of the account balance.

This was not a very long backtest, but in this period we had range-bound markets, strong trends, low volatility, extreme volatility, basically all kinds of market states. So these 141 trades can give us a good idea of the profitability of the system.

Due to my almost complete inability to program anything, I did a manual (and very time-consuming) backtest of this strategy on EUR/USD for 8 months, from July 2, 2012, to February 28, 2013. 1.2 pips were taken from each position, for spread and commissions, and the risk per trade was 3% of the account balance.

This was not a very long backtest, but in this period we had range-bound markets, strong trends, low volatility, extreme volatility, basically all kinds of market states. So these 141 trades can give us a good idea of the profitability of the system.

Risking only 3% per trade the system produced a return of 60.68% in 8 months, which is equivalent to a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 103.67%, while the maximum drawdown was only 12.62%. All in all the results are even better than I anticipated. If you are willing to accept drawdowns of around 25%, then you could risk 6% per trade, and achieve a return of almost 210% in a year. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, but I'm confident that this strategy can keep performing well in the long run. The profit factor is nothing extraordinary, but that is typical of short term strategies.
Final thoughts

Basically, this strategy allows us to catch the intraday trend, after the price breaches the levels reached during the late Asian session, and sticking with it until it reverses or consolidates for a long period, and does a very good job at it, even though it is very simple. If you employ basic trading tactics, such as going with trend, cutting your losses short and riding your winners, simple strategies can give us very good returns.

One final note to say that you have to take into consideration the Daylight Saving Time (when the hour changes) that happen twice a year. Make sure you always look for the previous 4 candles once the London session opens, it may not be at 8 GMT all year.

DISCLAIMER
This strategy is presented for forex educational purposes only. I hold no responsibility for any loss that might occur from the strategy. Test the strategy in a demo account before using it in a real account.  

(fxtp)

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