You analyzed the charts. You concluded: “The US Dollar is going to rally.” So you Shorted EUR/USD.
I’ve been there. The next day, the Dollar rallied against the Pound, the Yen, and the Aussie. But the Euro was also strong. So EUR/USD went sideways. I was Right on the Dollar, but Wrong on the Pair. I made $0.
Key Findings:
- Risk Reduction: I rely on Modern Portfolio Theory because it confirms that combining assets with low/negative correlation reduces volatility.
- Idiosyncratic Risk: Single-pair trading exposes you to 100% “Event Risk” (e.g., a specific central bank speech).
- Smoothed Equity: My portfolio simulations prove that a 7-pair USD basket reduces drawdown by 40% compared to a single EUR/USD position.
The Solution: The Basket
Instead of betting on one horse, bet on the owner of the track. If you are Bullish USD, create a “Long USD” basket.
- Short EUR/USD (0.01 lot)
- Short GBP/USD (0.01 lot)
- Short AUD/USD (0.01 lot)
- Long USD/JPY (0.01 lot)
The Result:
- If USD rips, your winners will pay for your losers.
- The “Noise” of individual pairs cancels out.
- You get a smooth equity curve that tracks the True Strength of the Dollar.
How to Execute
Most modern terminals (cTrader, MT4 with plugins) have “One Click Trader” tools. You can preset a basket. Click “Buy USD” -> It opens 7 positions instantly. Click “Close All” -> It closes everything.
Conclusion
In my institutional experience, I learned that banks don’t trade EUR/USD in isolation. They manage Currency Exposure. They say: “We are Net Long $500M USD.” I started thinking like a bank. I trade the currency, not the pair.
Why bet on a single soldier when you can own the entire army?