Back when I first started learning about investing, I decided to
start from the beginning and read basic books on personal finance as
well as "guides" for understanding all of the investment world in a nut
shell. Most of these authors were very knowledgeable and informative,
but their investment advice was far too conservative for my taste. They
would literally write chapter after chapter talking about the
differences between conservative investing, which according to them
generally yields somewhere around 5% PA, as opposed to "risky"
investing which usually meant a diversified stock/mutual fund portfolio
yielding (in my mind) only slightly higher averages. What kind of
returns can you expect in the stock market? Well they say the market
has gone up an average of 10% a year since Adam and Eve. Popular
indexes like the DOW and the now more popular S&P500 have always,
like real estate, "gone up over time."
Now, these market averages are almost worshiped like golden
calves. Repeatedly drilled into my brain was the concept that there
were hundreds (if not thousands) of fund managers and other
"professionals" out there with Harvard degrees, decades of experience,
millions of dollars under management, and they were all spending 15
hours a day consuming every single bit of market information in the
hopes of beating these golden calves by a few points. What chance did I have? If Dr. Fund Guru Jr. who eats,
sleeps, breathes the markets and has more credentials than I have
individual hairs on my body can't consistently make 20% a
year...well...forget it kid...your chances are slim to none. I guess
I'll buy some shares of XYZ fund and accept the scraps off the table
from the stock gurus.
NOT!
The foreign exchange market offers many benefits that the stock
market does not have. Most of these have been beaten to death on
various forums, blogs, articles, e-books, etc. However, it's always
good to reiterate the positive (my own personal reason is last): —
Forex offers unprecedented liquidity. With over two trillion dollars
transacted per day on the market, it makes filling any buy/sell order
virtually instant. That equates to less slippage and more
profitability. "Paper trading" stocks vs actually trading stocks is
very different, because orders may not be filled in a timely manner.
The difference between trading a forex demo account and an actual
account is virtually nill. — Forex is available 24 hours a day 5.5 days
a week, as opposed to the daylight trading hours of the stock
exchanges. — Forex is uncontrollable by large entities. Large net worth
individuals, banks and fund managers who throw their weight around in
the stock market can often have huge effects on price action. Because
of the immense volume of foreign currency traded per day, the market is
unmoved by "heavy hitters." Not even central banks can control the
Forex market. — Forex offers up to 200:1 leverage as opposed to 2:1
stock leverage. — Forex has no restrictions for selling short, as
opposed to the stock market's "uptick" rule — Forex can actually be
traded INSIDE of an IRA or Roth IRA account. — Forex gains are taxed at
the preferred 60/40 rate, no matter what trading style you use
(intra-day, swing, position) as opposed to the tax penalties for
holding stocks for short periods of time.
The list does go on, but for me the biggest advantage is a
psychological one. I know it probably sounds silly, but fear and
intimidation can sometimes subconsciously defeat us before we even
begin. I don't like the idea of having to live up to, and in a way,
compete with "professional managers" who have more knowledge of the
fundamentals of the markets than I ever will. It's almost as if Forex,
in some way, levels the playing field. I don't have to psychologically
compete against anyone's idea of what kind of returns are "acceptable
and realistic" and what kind of returns are "pure fantasy." I only have
to trade until I can find an acceptable reward to risk ratio, and
consistent profitability thereof. The only one I compete against is
myself.
by Joshua White
http://www.earnforex.com/articles/forex_no_psychological_limitations.php
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