I absolutely stick to the above words of wisdom, however if I have to modify it a little, “Don’t entirely forget the news (at least you should know at what time the scheduled data is coming out, so that you can adjust or close your open trades, to avoid possible spikes), but you’ve to only trade your chart”. The latter part of the paragraph is damn right though. You just don’t know when the news is priced in, and when its not and you can mostly not predict which way the news is going to affect price (unless it’s a Central Bank Intervention, or a significant deviation from the expected to the actual interest rate announcement)
If you see hundreds of charts, posted on this blog in the past few months, or thousands of them posted on the twitter for the past 4 years, you would have noticed that I don’t use much indicators. I have never been an indicator enthusiast because they are merely derivatives of price. My approach has been, “Why on earth should I study derivatives of price when I must trade price itself?” If you have a different opinion to me and have been time and again doing well over the years, well then your achievements speak for themselves. In the business of currency trading (or for that matter, trading any market), everybody must discover their own niche that works for them.
I sometimes observe traders (when I go in general trading chat rooms) doing all sorts of fundamental calculation which baffles me to the max, as to how they can use that information to decide on a buy/sell decision and their stop losses. May be there is a way, and I am certainly not a hater of fundamental trading, but I think retail traders like you and me have to rely on your charts more than anything else, and the charts need to be prepared “all the time”.
Traders don't realise the importance of preparation and planning. Your routine at the start of the trading day should be to stay unruffled, attentive and chart ready for action which is the ultimate goal towards being prepared. Plot your fibs, mark the previous day’s highs and lows, and don’t just stay obsessed with Eur/Usd.

“Charts know everything” (well almost) :)
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