Short selling has been banned in South Korea since March 2020
- It was banned in an effort to reduce market volatility during the pandemic and recovery
- also applies to 150 firms listed on the secondary-KOSDAQ
Here are the 24 rules:
1. Amount of capital to use: Divide your capital into 10 equal parts and never risk more than one-tenth of your capital on any one trade.
2. Use stop loss orders. Always protect a trade.
3. Never overtrade. This would be violating your capital rules.
4. Never let a profit run into a loss. After you once have a profit raise your stop loss order so that you will have no loss of capital.
5. Do not buck the trend. Never buy or sell if you are not sure of the trend according to your charts and rules.
6. When in doubt, get out and don’t get in when in doubt.
7. Trade only in active markets. Keep out of slow, dead ones.
8. Equal distribution of risk. Trade in two or three different commodities if possible. Avoid tying up all your capital in any one commodity.
9. Never limit your orders or fix a buying or selling price.
10. Don’t close your trades without a good reason. Follow up with a stop loss order to protect your profits.
11. Accumulate a surplus. After you have made a series of successful trades, put some money into a surplus account to be used only in emergency or in times of panic.
12. Never buy or sell just to get a scalping profit.
13. Never average a loss. This is one of the worst mistakes a trader can make.
14. Never get out of the market just because you have lost patience or get into the market because you are anxious from waiting.
15. Avoid taking small profits and big losses.
16. Never cancel a stop loss order after you have placed it at the time you make a trade.
17. Avoid getting in and out of the market too often.
18. Be just as willing to sell short as you are to buy. Let your object be to keep with the trend and make money.
19. Never buy just because the price of a commodity is low or sell short just because the price is high.
20. Be careful about pyramiding at the wrong time. Wait until the commodity is very active and has crossed resistance levels before buying more, and until it has broken out of the zone of distribution before selling more.
21. Select the commodities that show strong uptrend to pyramid on the buying side and the ones that show definite downtrend to sell short.
22. Never hedge. If you are long one commodity and it starts to go down, do not sell another commodity short to hedge it. Get out at the market: Take your loss and wait for another opportunity.
23. Never change your position in the market without a good reason. When you make a trade, let it be for some good reason, or according to some definite rule; then do not get out without a definite indication of a change in trend.
24. Avoid increasing your trading after a long period of success or a period of profitable trades.
Highlights:
One of the key trading maxims in the FX world is pairing strength against weakness.If you need a refresher on that concept please do check that out here. So, yesterday we had the RBNZ rate meeting which has given us a weak NZD bias. Going into the event a client was asking me what I was going to do before the RBNZ rate meeting. The answer was simple, wait. Waiting to for the central bank to show its hand. The RBNZ has now done that and that is what gives us a bearish bias.
Reasons for the RBNZ’s weakness
The RBNZ has launched a set of bearish policies extending its asset purchases programme and showing openness to negative interest rates. They increased their quantitative easing (LSAP) programme to $100bn and extended its length from 12 to 22 months. Furthermore, the RBNZ expressed a preference for a lower or negative OCR and a ‘Funding for Lending Programme’, while leaving all options on the table.
So, we now have a short to medium term NZD bearish bias, look to pair it with currencies as they show strength. Yesterday’s strong AUD employment data make AUDNZD longs appealing on pull backs.