Payment timing when using Agent Nichi EA with the Martingale method 【Hybrid FX Do-Trade System Aji Nichi Vol.7】
I pride myself on being the strongest as a part-time trader.
No matter how much money I make from FX trading, I intend to stay a part-time trader for life.
Why is that?
Because it makes me the strongest.
Why the strongest?
The strongest risk hedge is being a salaried employee or a business owner, because even if one side fails, the possibility of making a comeback remains extremely high.
What if a full-time trader fails? Getting hired by someone else is too painful, right!?
But if a part-time trader fails, you can earn again through a business and try again right away.
Well, in that sense, I’m steadily convinced that part-time traders are the strongest.
Now, onto the main topic.
Today I titled it “The timing of settlement when using Aji-Nitchi EA with Martingale.”
Please check the details in the video.
For those who won’t watch the video, I’ll explain using still images.
By the way, currently “Aji-Nitchi” is accepting pre-orders, so if you’re interested, please check the details from this link.
Now, to the main topic.

The image above shows a smartphone screen, and the red-framed area is the sign notification email transferred from MT4 from morning to 5 PM on that day.
Even after more than half a day has passed, there are four sign notifications for two currency pairs.
There are days with more, and days with fewer.
As I’ve mentioned several times on the blog, signs are for defining the trend, so you do not have to enter at the same time as the sign.
This is a very distinctive feature of this indicator.
Many indicators I’ve used before assumed you had to stare at the chart all day, but as a part-time trader, I can’t watch the chart all day, so indicators and sign tools aimed at full-time traders were mostly useless to me.
Wouldn’t it be nice to have a sign tool that gives me direction once or twice a day?
While those days passed by, I never encountered such a trend-following indicator.
So I decided to develop an indicator myself.

The conclusion I arrived at as a part-time trader is a signal tool that defines the trend.
About 2–3 signals per day on one currency pair.
Signals should not occur too frequently within ranges.
And it became important to have MT4 signal transfer that can be checked on a smartphone during breaks at work.
There are many signal tools for busy part-time traders, but after trying over 100 indicators, when signals arrive on your phone, the timing was often already too late.
Conversely, there were many times when signals were frequent and a huge number of notifications arrived by email every day.
I got tired of being pushed around by signals!
When dozens of signals for one pair arrive on my smartphone, I lose interest in looking at the chart.
My head gets confused, and just looking at emails doesn’t reveal the trend for that pair.
Too many up and down signals, and you end up wondering which way is which!
For these reasons, the Hybrid FX Trading System Aji-Nitchi, which is currently available for pre-order, was born.

As shown above, to view the same MT4 on Windows PC, Android phone, iPhone, Mac, or tablet, using a VPS is extremely convenient.
If you receive a sign on your smartphone but the Aji-Nitchi indicator or EA isn’t visible in the MT4 app, it’s inconvenient.
With a VPS, you can log in from all devices with a single app, sharing the same chart screen, indicators, and EA across devices.
Whether you’re at work, on your day off, or both a part-time or full-time trader, this is a very convenient method, so please try VPS.

The image above is the chart screen I saw when I logged into the VPS via the smartphone app.
The bottom red-framed row is for viewing correlation and inverse correlation.
The order of these is actually very important.
AUD/USD is on the left edge and is rising (no signal).
The middle-lower row is EUR/AUD (no signal).
The lower-right is GBP/AUD (signal present).
From the left, it’s an uptrend, then a downtrend, then another downtrend.
Because AUD is strong while both EUR and GBP are weak, these three form an inverse correlation, indicating a potential entry opportunity.
The correlation means both EUR/AUD and GBP/AUD are weak.
In other words, from the left, AUD is a long entry.
And because the opposite trend of AUD is inverse correlation…
EUR/AUD in the center is a short entry due to inverse correlation.
GBP/AUD on the right is also a short entry due to inverse correlation.
Thus I entered all three currency pairs at once.
Part-time traders should view the chart only when signs occur, and even then, ideally only a few times per day across all nine pairs combined.
Now, let’s look at the entries right after the entry.
First, GBP/AUD.

For the GBP/AUD short entry, there is a mouse cursor at the top left, but the EA’s SELL button is visible at the cursor location.
Because操作 on a smartphone is difficult, just clicking this button automatically handles stop loss, take profit, and trailing stop, which is very convenient.
As shown above, two red wavy lines are the take profit and stop loss lines.
Since the EA parameters set a stop loss of 50 pips and take profit of 50 pips, simply entering triggers automatic stop loss and take profit.
Trailing stop is set to 10 pips in the EA parameters, so once there is a 10-pip profit, it becomes break-even, and thereafter, as new lows are formed, the stop automatically moves up by 10 pips.
Following this, AUD/USD is long, EUR/AUD is short, and GBP/AUD is short, so three positions were held.


Huh?
All three are showing losses as they expand.
They aren’t hitting stop loss yet, but they are pulling back to the longer-term baseline, then bouncing again.
The long-term baseline is the 50% retracement line of the 4-hour Ichimoku chart.
This indicator looks at the 5-minute chart while simultaneously judging the trends on the 1-hour and 4-hour charts at a glance.
Therefore, the longest-term resistance is the long-term baseline.
At this point, if you consider the trend to continue, you’d resort to averaging down or Martingale, right?
Or do you endure the loss until stop loss?
I entered all three pairs with Martingale, doubling the lot sizes.
Initially, all three pairs were entered at 1.0 lot.
This is because the EA is configured to set the initial lot at 1.0.
And since the lot multiplier is set to 2, simply pressing the EA’s trailing button adds twice the lot size.
In other words, all three currency pairs ended up with 2.0 lots added, which is Martingale.
That’s what this image shows.

So AUD/USD now has a total of 3.0 lots (1.0 + 2.0).
If you look closely at the image, just above the higher entry of 2.0 lots, you can see a red line for the SL (stop loss). If it rises this far, the 3.0 lots would be stopped out.
But which do you think is more risk-managed: entering 3.0 lots from the start, or starting with 1.0 lot, and adding 2.0 lots when the drawdown increases but you are still near the final resistance?
The initial 1.0 lot automatically sets a 50 pips stop loss by the EA.
For example, if the unrealized loss is minus 40 pips and the remaining distance to stop loss is 10 pips, and the long-term baseline is the final resistance, then adding 2.0 lots at that point would only require a 10-pip stop loss.
If you had entered 3.0 lots from the start and stopped out at 50 pips, that would be a large loss, but by dividing, raising the average, and increasing the number of favorable positions, closing when profitable is more advantageous, isn’t it?

AUD/USD has halfway to the stop loss.
In other words, about 25 pips to go, since it’s halfway to 50 pips.
So I add a double lot.
Next is the Martingale scene for EUR/AUD.

EUR/AUD seems to have more unrealized losses, with the bottommost green line representing the initial 1.0 lot.
The green line above it shows the second Martingale, 2.0 lots, sold at a higher level.
This significantly raises the average, covering the initial disadvantage of selling 1.0 lots.
There looks to be about 15 pips to the stop loss.
Finally, GBP/AUD.

At such a close stop loss, I hesitated for a moment, but as I watched, it did not hit stop loss, so I added the second Martingale with double the lots.
Because the long-term baseline is starting to rise in a stair-step manner, the resistance at the top of the move happened to align with the long-term baseline, which formed the basis for entry.
Then one hour passes.
Of course, after the first three hours and after this hour, I did not watch the chart.
That means I often work or watch YouTube without staring at the screen.
Therefore, it takes about 3 minutes to enter on a smartphone.
Three hours later, increasing all three positions with Martingale in 3 minutes.
Finally, closing within 1 minute after one hour.
Overall, the trading time in a day is about 7 minutes.
So, what happened to the three pairs where the positions were doubled with Martingale?

Thus, since all positions across the three pairs with a total of 3 lots turned positive, I pressed the EA’s CC button to reset all positions on the account at once.
The CC button is the white CC button in the top-left of the chart.
No matter which pair’s CC button you press, all positions across the account, along with limit orders and stop orders, are settled and reset all at once.
This series of trades’ results are here.

Of the six, only GBP/AUD hit stop loss, while the others turned positive.
When I take profits, I used to focus on the amount, making profits small and losses devastating. Now I avoid moving the initial stop loss and try to keep increased lots with minimal risk, closing when favorable.
When I implemented this on the chart, I used to stay up all night watching charts.
Now, by using effective timing and logic, I’ve built a system that can settle in about seven minutes a day, making work efficiency about 100 times easier.
After all, we don’t live to trade; time is our precious life. Trading should be a wealth-building activity with capital that can be allocated, not something we must do every day. Even 10 minutes a day or 1 hour a day can yield higher capital efficiency.
The goal in life is to be happy for ourselves and to create a happy environment for those around us.
And making money is merely a means, not the purpose of life.
Because when we die, we cannot take money with us to the afterlife.
As part-time traders, no matter how much we earn, we should cherish time with friends and family within society, maximize leverage in asset management, and coexist advanced trading tools with discretionary judgment to minimize time and maximize efficiency. I believe this will cultivate happy traders.
I pride this as the essence of this system.
That’s all for today!
Let’s meet again on the blog.
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