When a chance of 100 Pips hourly wage comes, quickly take profit!!
Good evening, I am Kuu, a part-time trader.
Today I also uploaded a video commentary for the “Hybrid FX Trade System Ajinitchi.”
If you have time, please take a look.
Since I received a signal on my smartphone from MT4, I started recording, and about an hour later I was able to secure 100 pips quickly.
I will explain the content using images.
Oh! Before that, I just started recording videos about this system and today uploaded the 10th video.
With this, it feels like the explanations for “Hybrid FX Trade System Ajinitchi” have roughly completed one circuit.
Because it’s a system, I will also provide the methodology as a service to purchasers, so if you watch these 10 videos repeatedly, I think you’ll get a sense of the method, including how to use the tools.
This video is somewhat a review of the previous nine videos.
In short, to improve the accuracy of signals, discretionary judgment is necessary, and to achieve that, understanding correlations and inverse correlations is essential.
Whether signals’ accuracy and the criteria for judging signals depend on whether you understand this.
Why monitor 9 currency pairs?
Wouldn’t monitoring many assets make your mind tangled and judgments difficult?
There are viewpoints that focusing on a single pair is easier to understand.
I’ve been involved with the market for 15 years, so there was a long period when I traded only yen pairs like USD/JPY or GBP/JPY, or EUR/USD.
Even if long, USD/JPY was about 1–2 years, GBP/JPY about 3 years, and EUR/USD about 3 years.
During that time I traded with a single currency pair.
Some people succeed with just one currency pair, but for me, applying correlation and inverse correlation as a filter made it easier and increased win rate and profitability.
Because if you watch this video, you’ll see that when a trend is present, you can rapidly increase positions by using correlations and inverse correlations.
This time I added four positions to four currency pairs using a martingale approach, totaling eight positions.
I entered eight times in an hour and secured a total of 100 pips.
The reason I use this trading method is...
A part-time trader’s time efficiency is everything.
Because I’m busy with other work, there is little time to trade.
Part-time traders can’t sit and watch charts for long, so how can we reduce risk in a short time and take many positions at once?
And how can we close positions quickly right after entering?
Or can we use an EA to leave it running, reducing risk and expanding profit?
These questions are always relevant.
Of course similar themes apply to full-time traders, but for part-time traders time efficiency is especially important.
Thus, after self-questioning and trial and error, I arrived at the method for part-time traders: “Hybrid FX Trade System Ajinitchi.”
My method is unique and may be hard to understand for some, but the premise is that there is no good or bad in trading itself.
If anything, a bad trade is one that erodes capital and kills you off the market.
A good trade is one that grows capital and keeps you alive in the market longer.
That’s how I see it.
Therefore I don’t think that averaging down (grid) or martingale or monitoring multiple currency pairs is bad; if the results in time efficiency and capital efficiency are good, that’s a win.
Now that the introduction has become quite long, let’s get to the main topic.

I run MT4 on a VPS, so I can access the VPS from any device, letting me view the same chart screen as always.
Confirmed signals on MT4 at the VPS are forwarded to my smartphone via MT4’s settings.
I use Yahoo Mail in an app, but recently I can forward to LINE and Gmail as well.
Why Yahoo Mail? Because it’s an account I hardly use.
Gmail sends too many emails every day, so I have notifications turned off on my phone.
And only Yahoo Mail has notifications on with sound.
Conversely, I have all other apps’ notifications off and sounds disabled.
This way, only Yahoo Mail makes sounds and shows notifications, making it hard to miss MT4 signal notifications.

Other MT4-to-notification messages have mostly been moved to Gmail, so if you see a notification in Yahoo Mail as in the image above, it’s almost certainly from MT4.

The app is called RD Client, though there are various apps available.
It’s an app to log in to the VPS; once set up, it remembers login details, so you can simply tap to access the VPS and operate MT4 with the usual indicators and EAs.

The red-framed portion contains the email content, so you can spot a signal to buy EUR/USD and buy USD/JPY just from the subject line without opening it.
At this stage you can already anticipate a certain trend.
First, the euro and the pound are strong, which suggests the dollar/yen is in a range or in a downtrend?
Is the cross yen rising because the yen is strong?
That’s a possible assumption.
What I’m curious about is which is stronger, EUR/GBP (euro vs pound) or vice versa? (Note: the original says “eurpon,” likely EUR/GBP or EUR/JPY confusion; but translated as EUR/GBP.)
I train my mind to anticipate and then check with the actual chart.

On the right edge of the two charts for EUR/USD and GBP/JPY, there are signals (upward arrows) in pink.
Signals indicate a trend, so it’s not simply a matter of whether to buy or sell this pair.
I focused on the initial movement of the trend when developing the signals.
Defining a trend is very difficult, and if you define the initial movement too easily, you may misread very small fluctuations as a trend, leading to many false signals.
Until now, the signals I kept buying too frequently caused repeated up/down entries, eventually eroding trust in the signals and removing the indicator.
That is why this signal tool, “Hybrid FX Trade System Ajinitchi,” was born.

These two are arguably essential among the nine currency pairs.
However, I don’t frequently trade these two pairs.
In fact, I hardly trade USD/JPY and EUR/GBP.
The reason is that USD/JPY and EUR/GBP are important pairs for comparing correlations and inverse correlations.
Conversely, the remaining seven pairs are actively traded.
This time it was a long on EUR/USD and a long on GBP/JPY.
Looking at EUR/GBP, I see an ongoing uptrend in which it’s not clear when the rise will begin.
USD/JPY is also in an uptrend range, so the dollar isn’t weak.
The signals are EUR/USD, so ideally the dollar would decline, but the dollar is strong and the euro may be even stronger.
With that decision procedure, I judged that the EUR/USD signal was not a false signal.
And the other signal is GBP/JPY; if the cross yen is weak, USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, and GBP/JPY will rise.
The upper three columns show all crosses rising, so GBP/JPY looks good for a long.
Then I bought GBP/JPY and EUR/USD, and also bought EUR/JPY and GBPUSD, making a total of four currency pairs long.
The bottom three columns relate to AUD components, but since the AUD trend isn’t clear, the bottom three columns are on hold.
A rule of not trading what you don’t understand is important.

By maximizing the nine-split screen layout to view a week’s flow, you can see a week’s worth of movement.
Minimizing the candles lets you view a week at a glance, so you can picture a weekly candle in your head.
EUR/USD over the week shows a large bearish move, and currently the lower shadow of the bearish candle is extending.
I don’t know how far a retracement will go, but since there’s momentum to surpass the recent high, I entered.
Next is USD/JPY.

This signals a rebound, and next week might see a large bullish candle.
But USD/JPY is volatile, so I did not enter here.
If USD/JPY rises more strongly, I would have held off EUR/USD earlier.
Since USD/JPY was in a high range and flat, I judged that EUR/USD might rise.
Next is EUR/GBP.

The euro is undergoing a V-shaped recovery.
Looking over a week, strength isn’t one-directional.
With this motive I bought both EUR/USD and GBP/USD.
If the EUR/GBP trend is strong, I buy only the stronger currency pairings.
For example, if EUR is clearly rising in EUR/GBP, I evaluate euro by looking at EUR/JPY, EUR/USD, and EUR/AUD in a vertical sequence.
Next is AUD/USD, which also forms a reverse V but has entered a wide range.
Since the direction isn’t clear, I put all AUD-related pairs on hold.
Among the nine pairs, this one showed the most clearly rising pattern.

Russia’s issue remains stiff, and it’s not clear if this is a risk-on environment, but it feels like safe-haven demand for the yen has faded and the yen is weakening.
I generally don’t pay much attention to fundamentals.
I believe everything is priced in, and fundamentals are reflected in price movements.
I hardly watch newspapers or TV news, so I trade mainly on technicals, though major events inevitably reach my ears.
And then after an hour passes.

I added double lots to each of the four pairs, resulting in the position shown above.
And the result is here.

If the chart’s wave pattern is unclear, I’ll take profit at 10 pips, but this time the wave wasn’t difficult to rise with, so I left it for a while.
As a result, an hour later I could secure these pips.

The bottom four frames in red are the initial entries with 1.0 lot.
Four currency pairs, eight entries, total lots 4.0 + 8.0 = 12.0 lots.
Dividing 100 pips by 12 lots gives less than 10 pips per lot.
Even if you profit 10 pips from a single pair, recognizing correlations and inverse correlations and trading with a holistic view and discretionary judgment makes it possible to take on bigger sized positions and achieve such trades more easily.
The signals are merely trend-trigger signals to view the chart, and enhancing their accuracy depends on correlation and inverse correlation criteria.
Part-time traders cannot watch charts all day, but when price movement becomes more volatile, you can receive signals and perform chart work as needed.
I hope today’s article is helpful to everyone.
See you again!