【Do This Much】A method that makes chart analysis easier to keep up even if you’re not good at it
When you start FX, there is a wall that many people hit first. That is chart analysis. Candlesticks, trendlines, horizontal lines, indicators, situational awareness. There are so many things to learn that many people don’t know where to look.
And the more you feel you’re not good at analysis, the more you tend to think, “Maybe I’m not suited for FX.” However, there is something I want you to know here.There are ways to continue without being strong at chart analysis.
Of course, having analytical ability is a plus. Those who can read the market deeply are strong. But not everyone has to aim for that. Especially for beginners or people with side jobs, adding too many difficult analyses can actually make it harder to continue.
People who struggle with chart analysis tend to have these concerns.
- I don’t know what to base my entries on
- What others say differs, causing confusion
- The more you look, the more you get lost
- Analysis takes time and makes you tired
- In the end, you end up jumping in by feel
If this continues, you’ll struggle with “continuing” before you win in the market. So what’s needed is not more difficult knowledge, butchanging it into a less迷い (less confusion) shape.
For example, decide how long you look. Narrow the entering conditions. Decide when to exit. Decide days not to trade. With this rule-based approach, even if you lack confidence in analysis, it becomes easier to proceed. What matters is not to read perfectly, butto be able to repeat things without hesitation.
What’s important in FX isn’t just the ability to perform difficult analyses.
Even if you’re not good at analysis, designing it to be easy to continue is just as important.
In fact, those who are bad at analysis tend to push themselves to memorize complex things, which makes it harder. And as it becomes harder, confidence wanes, and rules become even more inconsistent. Therefore, rather than forcing yourself to increase the parts you’re not good at, it’s more realistic to tailor it to be easy for you to implement.
That’s what I personally came to value in the end. Rather than continuing to read charts deeply, I found it easier to check at a set time, enter at a set time, and exit at a set time. A time-rule-based approach feels less迷い (less hesitation) and easier to continue. Especially for beginners, it’s more important to have a model that can be continued consistently than to have exceptional analytical ability.A model that can be continued without wobbling is more important.
Being poor at chart analysis doesn’t mean you have to give up on FX altogether. It’s not that you’re unsuited; perhaps your current method isn’t fitting. There are too many places to look. Too many judgments. Too much to memorize. If you choose such a method, it’s natural for it to be hard.
The problem isn’t being bad at analysis.
The problem might be that you haven’t been able to choose a form that’s easy for you to continue.
That’s why what’s needed may not be to learn more, but to have a rule-based method you can continue without forcing yourself, a design you can implement without hesitation, and a method that fits your life.
If right now chart analysis is difficult for you, there’s no need to blame yourself. What you should review isn’t your ability buta rule-based method that’s easy to proceed with even if you’re not good at analysis.
We’re compiling a time-rule-based method to avoid exhausting yourself with chart monitoring
I’m focusing onfor beginners, low-risk orientedand a time strategy that doesn’t require chart monitoring.
To avoid changing decisions based on emotions,a rule-based approach that progresses only at set times.
If you don’t want to wobble by discretion anymore, please check the details.
From the “Read More” button, you can also get the next entry date, performance, and the method as a free gift.