If you’ve been trading Forex for a while, you’ve probably heard this saying:
___“Don’t jump into a trade right when the London session opens.”
And that advice is absolutely true.
The first 30 minutes of the London session are where most retail traders get burned out.
Not because they’re unlucky - but because that’s how the market works.
1. London Open: Liquidity Surges – Chaos Begins
When London opens, the Asian session is winding down.
This overlap creates a burst of liquidity, leading to sharp volatility.
Banks, hedge funds, and institutions begin positioning their orders.
Dozens of pending orders are triggered at once.
The result?
Price moves like a wild beast - violent spikes, fake breakouts, and sudden reversals.
Retail traders see the strong moves, get excited, jump in…
and get wiped out before the real trend even starts.
2. The Trap Called “Early Breakout”
One of the classic London session traps is the false breakout.
You see price breaking a key level, think: “That’s it! A clear signal!”, and you enter.
But minutes later, the market reverses — and your trade vanishes with it.
This isn’t random.
Smart money players intentionally create these fake breakouts to trigger the crowd’s orders — buys above resistance, sells below support — then reverse to accumulate positions at better prices.
An old trick, but still brutally effective — and every morning, retail traders keep falling for it.
3. FOMO – The Silent Account Killer
Nothing messes with a trader’s mind like seeing a massive candle explode right after the open.
You feel like you’re missing the move of the day.
That’s when FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) takes control — and discipline disappears.
But here’s the truth:
The first 30 minutes aren’t for making money — they’re for reading the market.
Professional traders don’t chase candles; they wait and watch to see which side truly dominates.
Retail traders, on the other hand, trade on emotion — and the market always punishes emotion.
4. So, What Should You Do?
Simple: Do nothing.
Let the chaos settle.
Watch who takes control — the buyers or the sellers.
Wait for the post-fakeout structure to form — that’s where the real opportunities appear.
Many professional traders use what’s called the “London Fakeout Strategy.”
They don’t fight the fakeout — they wait for the reaction after the fakeout to trade with the real direction of the market.
Because the real edge isn’t in prediction — it’s in patience.
💡 Coming Soon:
Would you like me to write Part 2: “The London Strategy Playbook” — a detailed guide on how to trade after the first 30 minutes of the London session,
with real examples and clear strategies?
___“Don’t jump into a trade right when the London session opens.”
And that advice is absolutely true.
The first 30 minutes of the London session are where most retail traders get burned out.
Not because they’re unlucky - but because that’s how the market works.
1. London Open: Liquidity Surges – Chaos Begins
When London opens, the Asian session is winding down.
This overlap creates a burst of liquidity, leading to sharp volatility.
Banks, hedge funds, and institutions begin positioning their orders.
Dozens of pending orders are triggered at once.
The result?
Price moves like a wild beast - violent spikes, fake breakouts, and sudden reversals.
Retail traders see the strong moves, get excited, jump in…
and get wiped out before the real trend even starts.
2. The Trap Called “Early Breakout”
One of the classic London session traps is the false breakout.
You see price breaking a key level, think: “That’s it! A clear signal!”, and you enter.
But minutes later, the market reverses — and your trade vanishes with it.
This isn’t random.
Smart money players intentionally create these fake breakouts to trigger the crowd’s orders — buys above resistance, sells below support — then reverse to accumulate positions at better prices.
An old trick, but still brutally effective — and every morning, retail traders keep falling for it.
3. FOMO – The Silent Account Killer
Nothing messes with a trader’s mind like seeing a massive candle explode right after the open.
You feel like you’re missing the move of the day.
That’s when FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) takes control — and discipline disappears.
But here’s the truth:
The first 30 minutes aren’t for making money — they’re for reading the market.
Professional traders don’t chase candles; they wait and watch to see which side truly dominates.
Retail traders, on the other hand, trade on emotion — and the market always punishes emotion.
4. So, What Should You Do?
Simple: Do nothing.
Let the chaos settle.
Watch who takes control — the buyers or the sellers.
Wait for the post-fakeout structure to form — that’s where the real opportunities appear.
Many professional traders use what’s called the “London Fakeout Strategy.”
They don’t fight the fakeout — they wait for the reaction after the fakeout to trade with the real direction of the market.
Because the real edge isn’t in prediction — it’s in patience.
💡 Coming Soon:
Would you like me to write Part 2: “The London Strategy Playbook” — a detailed guide on how to trade after the first 30 minutes of the London session,
with real examples and clear strategies?
Do you want to learn and share market insights every day?
This is the place for you => t.me/+3z342PIIcp4xOTJl
This is the place for you => t.me/+3z342PIIcp4xOTJl
Related publications
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
Do you want to learn and share market insights every day?
This is the place for you => t.me/+3z342PIIcp4xOTJl
This is the place for you => t.me/+3z342PIIcp4xOTJl
Related publications
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
