Forex scalping strategy: How to start scalping forex
Interested in scalping forex? Learn everything you need to know to get started here, including the best forex scalping strategy, how to trade profitably and which scalping indicators to use.
- What is scalping forex?
- Is forex scalping profitable?
- How to scalp forex
- The best forex scalping strategy
- When to scalp forex
- Indicators for scalping forex
- Forex scalping tips
What is scalping forex?
Scalping forex is a style of trading the currency markets that involves making lots of extremely short-term positions each day, targeting small profit margins from each one. Essentially, you’re looking to make money on tiny ‘micro trends’. You open your position as one begins and close it the moment it turns against you.
Like day traders, forex scalpers will aim to never leave a position open overnight. But they’ll open and close trades at a much faster rate, meaning scalping requires even more discipline and focus than day trading. It’s the opposite of position trading, where you look to make large gains from a handful of long-term positions.
The chart below shows a possible 3-hour session from a scalper, opening five trades on AUD/CAD based on signals from the stochastic oscillator. Many scalp traders, though, will open far more positions than this.
You don’t have to scalp forex. In fact, lots of scalpers focus on other markets like commodities and indices instead. But currencies do have some characteristics that make them particularly suitable to this approach:
- Volatility. FX pairs tend to be highly volatile, which provides lots of opportunities for scalpers each day
- Liquidity. Forex is the most-traded market in the world by volume. This means you can usually enter and exit trades quickly and cheaply – which are both key to scalping successfully
- Round-the-clock trading. The currency markets trade 24 hours a day, so you can build a scalping strategy that suits you. However, some times are better to trade than others
Learn more about how to trade forex.
Is forex scalping profitable?
Scaping forex can be highly profitable; but it requires a lot of time, dedication and patience. When the profit margins are so tight on each trade, a single mistake can wipe out the gains from several winning trades, so risk management and discipline are essential to your success.
A day trader, for example, might look to open 5-10 positions over a single session. A scalper might do that in a single hour, on a single market – keeping each trade open for minutes or even seconds at a time, to capture a handful of pips of profit.
If you deviate from your plan and let a loss run, the profit from your day could be wiped out instantly.
You’ll also have to factor in the effect of losing trades on your bottom line. When you scalp forex, you’ll need to ensure that you make more winning trades than losing ones, since your risk-reward ratio is likely to be so tight on each position.
Explore risk management tools with City Index.
How to scalp forex
To scalp forex, you’ll need to follow these steps:
- Open a City Index account, which enables you to trade 80+ FX pairs as well as indices, shares and commodities
- Add some funds so you can start trading instantly
- Choose which markets you’d like to trade, and set out your strategy
- Start looking for opportunities using charts and indicators
- Open your first position, ensuring you have a stop and a limit in place
Alternatively, you can practise scalping with a free City Index demo. You’ll be able to trade our full range of markets using virtual funds, to see how scalping works without risking any real capital.
What’s the best forex scalping strategy?
The best forex scalping strategy for you will depend on your plan and aims. However, there are a few popular options among scalp traders:
- Breakout trading. Probably the most popular forex scalping strategy, breakout traders look for the new mini trends to begin, then trade them until they peter out
- High-volume trading. This strategy involves trading in large quantities to make as much profit as possible from the smallest moves, sometimes just a few pips
- Spread trading. Spread traders buy and sell an asset at the same time with different providers to attempt to profit from the differences in market prices. It can be hard to execute, as you’re going up against institutional traders and market makers
- Momentum trading. When you trade momentum, you look to capture smaller price action within an overall wider trend
Let’s take a look at a potential momentum trading strategy to see how one of these might work in practice.
Scalping forex breakouts on AUD/CAD
1. Look at the wider trend
The first step you’ll need to take when looking for momentum trades is to establish the overall trend of the market. When momentum trading, you always open positions in the same direction as the overall trend – but even if you’re employing a different strategy, it is still useful to take in the wider picture before you dive in.
In our AUD/CAD chart, for example, we can use two EMAs to identify an impending upward trend, which may contain mini moves suitable for scalping.
2. Zoom in
Next, it’s time to move over to a shorter-term chart. Which chart you use is up to you, but most scalpers tend to look at markets in 1-minute timeframes, or even less. In this example, we’re using a 1-minute chart.
3. Watch for opportunities
Now we hunt for new trades that fit our plan. You can use a wealth of indicators or price action analysis to look for opportunities, but here we’re going to use the stochastic oscillator, combined with two long-term EMAs to confirm the move before opening our position.
Below, for instance, we can see the stochastic giving an oversold signal, with a corresponding EMA crossover. A long trade may be on the cards.
4. Plan your exits
The speed of trading required when scalping means you won’t necessarily have time to refine your entry before seizing the opportunity, but you’ll still need to set a stop and a limit at your planned exit points.
Scalpers often have their stop very close to the point of entry, to limit losses if the signal proves incorrect. And your limit order will probably be five or ten points above – risk-reward ratios above 1:2 are fairly rare when scalping.
Best time to scalp forex
Forex markets are open 24 hours a day, so theoretically you can scalp forex whenever you want. But as we cover above, you’ll want to ensure that you have sufficient liquidity to enter and exit positions quickly – and keep your spread costs low.
Liquidity tends to peak when two sessions overlap, which happens three times each day:
- New York and London from 1pm to 4pm (UTC)
- Tokyo and Sydney from 12am to 7am (UTC)
- Tokyo and London from 8am to 9am (UTC)
Learn more about the best times to trade forex.
Best indicators for scalping forex
To scalp forex, you’ll want to use indicators that can give you lots of opportunities you can execute quickly each session. Some popular options include:
- RSI. The relative strength index (RSI) is an oscillator that evaluates recent price action to give a reading between 0-100. Anything under 30 is usually viewed as oversold, while over 70 is overbought
- Bollinger bands. Bollinger bands can be used to give instant insight into a market’s current volatility – and when the price moves beyond either of the outer bands, it may present a chance to trade
- Stochastic oscillator. Like the RSI, the stochastic is an oscillator that tells you a market’s current momentum with a reading between 0-100. However, it does so by comparing an FX pair’s closing price to the range of its recent closes
- Moving averages (MA). As we saw in our example, MA crossovers are often seen as a sign of an impending trend. Or you can use moving average convergence divergence (MACD) to spot new signals
However, you don’t have to use indicators when scalping forex. Lots of traders use price action alone, looking for certain candlestick patterns that have previously led to a specific movement.
Learn more about candlestick patterns.
Automated forex scalping
Scalping requires you to pay close attention to the markets whenever you’re active, reacting instantly to price action and sticking rigidly to a set plan. So, it may not surprise you to learn that lots of FX scalpers have chosen to automate their plans, using scalping software to execute trades instead of doing so manually.
Remember, though, that there are no easy get-rich-quick schemes in trading. Often, setting up software to trade the markets successfully requires more work than doing so yourself – and you’ll still need to constantly monitor and tweak your algorithm to ensure it doesn’t let you down.
Learn more about MT4, a popular platform for automated FX trading.