How To Successfully Trade The RSI IndicatorWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how the RSI indicator works, and how to spot divergence. Divergence is a great indication to tell you if a trend might be reversing.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
Eurusd-3
How To Successfully Trade The Stochastic IndicatorWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how the Stochastic indicator works. I will also show you how to use the Stochastic indicator to spot divergence on the chart which is one of my favorite ways of using this indicator.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
How To Set Up Alerts In TradingViewWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how to set up alerts using the TradingView alert system. Free accounts come with one alert but you can always upgrade to receive more.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
How To Understand And Trade With The MACDWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn what the MACD is and how to use it to find trade setups. No indicator can predict market moves perfectly, but this is a good indicator to have in your arsenal when you trade.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
How To Correctly Draw TrendlinesWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how to correctly identify and draw ascending and descending trendlines. Knowing how to identify these lines can set you up for great trade opportunities as shown in this video.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
How To Correctly Draw Support And Resistance LinesWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how to identify support and resistance levels on your chart. These are places where the price can do one of three things: hesitate, bounce, or breakout.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
How To Confirm An Uptrend Or DowntrendWelcome Traders!
In today's trading episode, you will learn how to identify a confirmed uptrend or downtrend. There are only two elements to define these chart patterns and that's what you'll learn about today.
Take time to practice what you learned in today's video.
Until next time, have fun, and trade confident :)
Pretty Good Oscillator Indicator
In a Downtrend:
Only sell
1. At the end of the overbought area
2. Add when crossing below 0 line
3. Add at the start of Oversold
In an Uptrend:
Only buy
1. At the end of the oversold area
2. Add when crossing above 0 line
3. Add at the start of overbought
Indicator Settings
Period 28
Overbought 2
Oversold -2
Your Capital is at Risk. This is only an educational video.
Pivot Point Strategy
A pivot point is a technical indicator to identify trends and reversals in any market.
Pivot points are calculated to determine critical levels in which the price could find its support and continues in the same direction or change from bullish to bearish, and vice-versa.
We can use Pivot points to find
entry,
stops,
and profit-taking by trying to determine the psychology of the market.
When we are above the pivot point the market is bullish.
In a bullish market if we cross a resistance level the uptrend will continue but if it bounces back we can expect a trend reversal.
When we are below the pivot point the market is bearish.
In a bearish market if we cross a support level the downtrend will continue but if it bounces back we can expect a trend reversal.
Volume Profile and Losing Trades (A Cool Trick Explained) 💪Hello guys,
trading it not just about taking winners. Losing trades are also part of the business and there is no point denying it. In my trading career, I took hundreds of losers (maybe even thousands) and I feel no shame in that.
Today, I would like to talk about a recent losing trade which I had on USD/JPY.
Let me first talk about the logic behind this trade – the reason why I took it.
The logic behind the trade
In the last week of 2020, there was a zone where heavy volumes got traded. It was at 103.53.
This was the Point Of Control (POC) of the whole week – this means the heaviest volumes throughout that week got traded there.
From this place, the price went sharply downwards which indicated that there were strong sellers present and that they entered most of their Short positions at that POC (103.53).
The idea behind my trade was to wait until the price reaches this Weekly POC again and enter a Short trade. I expected the sellers that entered their Shorts at the POC would defend this area and to push the price downwards from there again (this setup is called the “Volume Accumulation Setup“.
That didn’t happen tough…
How the trade went?
I went Short fro 103.53, but there was no selling reaction whatsoever and the price just shot past the level. I took a loss there.
After that it was time for me to shoot a Daily video for members of my trading course. In that video I talked about this losing trade and I said that if there was a pullback to the same level (103.53) it would be a nice place to open a Long position.
Why I said that?
Reversal Trade
There were two reasons why I wanted to take a Long from there.
The 1st reason was that there was a very strong, volume-based trading level (Weekly POC) breached. This is quite unusual, because such a strong level as Weekly POC should trigger a reaction!
The 2nd reason was that the price just shot through the Weekly POC without ANY sort of reaction. This is important, because it indicates that the Buyers were so strong and aggressive, that the Sellers didn’t stand a chance.
You usually discover the strength too late (after you had taken a Stop Loss) – like in this case, but you can still emerge a winner from this, if you switch sides and join the winning party.
The best way to do it is to wait for a pullback to the same level you entered your previous trade. Don’t chase the market. Wait for it to come to you.
Then enter a new trade, but this time in the opposite direction.
In this case, the first trade was a Short which failed, and the second trade was a Long (from the same level) after a pullback, which was a winner.
I call this a “Reversal Trade“. Those work best if a very strong level based on a Volume Profile setup fails, and when there is no reaction to it whatsoever. Those are two main conditions to remember.
I hope you guys found this helpful. Let me know what you think in the comments below.
Happy trading!
-Dale
🎓 EDU 4 of 20: A PROFESSIONAL TRADING APPROACH (FIST)Hi traders, wish you a happy and prosperous New Year.
In the last EDU post, we touched on the main factors that move currencies in the short, medium, and long run. Professional traders follow these influences to determine what currencies to buy and sell.
However, each trader has its own time horizon, so following long-term market determinants if you want to hold your trade for a few hours doesn’t make much sense. In fact, it’s counterproductive. Currencies can move in the opposite direction of their Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) rate, or Terms of Trade (ToT) for months and even years.
While these models work well to provide us with a possible market direction in the long-term, their short-term track-record is rather poor.
At CommaFX, we hold our trades mostly intraday or for a few days, and close them ahead of the Weekend (if a trade is still open on Friday.) This way, we can make more short-term trades and avoid the market risk of holding trades over the weekend. News that are releases over the weekend can have a significant impact on open trades after the markets open on Monday!
I am following the FIST approach, which is a global macro approach that allows us to take only high-probability trades. FIST stands for Fundamentals, Intermarket, Sentiment, and Technicals.
On the Fundamental side, I am following:
1. The current business cycle of a country through leading economic indicators such as housing starts, durable goods orders, and PMIs. Countries that are in the expansionary phase of the business cycle see their currencies strengthen, while countries that are in the recessionary phase usually see their currencies weaken over time.
2. Important news and themes: Such as Brexit, US stimulus, OPEC meetings, Central Bank commentaries...
3. Economic Indicators used by central banks to adjust their monetary policy: inflation rates, labor market indicators, economic growth.
On the Intermarket side, I am following the performance of other markets and asset classes that can have an impact on the FX market, such as:
1. Commodities: For commodity currencies like CAD (oil), INR (oil), AUD (copper, gold), NZD (dairy).
2. Stocks: The performance of the stock market can provide clues for future exchange rates (e.g. higher Nikkei 225 usually leads to JPY weakness).
3. Bonds and yields: Global capital chases the highest yield. When bond prices fall and yields rise in a country, the country’s currency will often strengthen.
If I see a strong divergence in the Intermarket (for example oil rises but the Canadian dollar falls, such as the case in the previous week), it gets our attention. I become bearish on the CAD from an Intermarket perspective.
On the Sentiment side, I am following risk appetite indicators and market sentiment as shown by the options and futures markets. What I pay attention to is:
1. The performance of risky assets vs safe-havens: stocks (risky), risk-currencies (AUD, NZD), oil (market optimism), metals (silver, copper) vs safe-havens such as gold, bonds, JPY and CHF. When risk sentiment is positive (risky assets are bought and safe-havens sold), I become bullish on stocks, AUD and NZD, and bearish on the JPY, CHF, and USD, for example.
2. Market positioning: I follow the positioning of fast money (hedge funds) and smart money as shown by the Commitment of Traders report. When the big guys become bullish on a currency and increase their bullish bias week over week, I become bullish as well.
3. Options put/call ratio: The put/call ratio shows how many put and call contracts are active for a currency. As the ratio rises (i.e. more puts than calls), this is usually a bearish sign for a currency, and vice-versa.
Finally, once I see a promising trading opportunity in the market after performing my Fundamental, Intermarket, and Sentiment analysis (matching strong vs weak currencies), it’s time to identify possible entry and exit points with the use of Technicals.
Bear in mind that I know what direction I want to trade (i.e. short USD/CAD) before even opening a price-chart! The chart is only used to find suitable levels for a selling position.
On the technical side, I focus on important retracement levels, volume profile, and price-action. I don’t trade breakouts, but wait for the market to come to my level (using LIMIT orders) to enter into a trade with an attractive reward-to-risk ratio.
This was a short introduction to how professional traders find trading candidates in the market. Unlike the usual retail trader who focuses only on charts, we know what we want to trade before even opening the chart!
A chart is the last thing I pay attention to, and my technical analysis takes me around 5 minutes to find where I want to enter into a trade. 90% of the time, I am only focused on fundamentals, intermarket, and sentiment.
If you found this post useful, please hit the “LIKE” button and follow. Also, I’ll try to respond to all questions you might have, just post them in the comment section below.
Stay tuned for the next part of our Educational Series! In total, there will be 20 posts that will CHANGE the way you trade and look at the markets – PROMISED!
EURUSD 4H FADE ENGULFING STRATEGYEngulfing Trading Strategy
The engulfing pattern is fairly regular in its occurrence. Appearing regularly means that a lot of the time, it simply won’t work. Statistically speaking, candlestick patterns have a high failure rate, which is why we come with the idea to fade the engulfing bar pattern. Of course, candlesticks can indeed be useful--but advanced trading strategies will require you to look beyond these basic charts and think deeper.
To develop an effective engulfing trading strategy, we need to establish a proper framework to stack the odds in our favor.
Step #1 Spot a Sideways Market
The first thing we want to look for is a sideways market where no one is in control.
This is very important because it’s setting the stage for price manipulation. The premise behind the typical price manipulation is based on the core idea that smart money needs buyers when they want to sell and they need sellers when they want to buy.
In this regard, our goal is to identify price areas where the trading volume is flat.
Usually, in ranging markets, volume remains mostly flat.
Since the market is range-bound around 75% of the time, it will be easy to spot a sideways market, especially on the intraday charts which are prone to exhibit more noise.
The natural flow of the price dictates that sooner or later we’re going to see an expansion in volume, which brings us to the second step.
Step #2 Localize the Engulfing Pattern
The ranging price action needs to be followed by the engulfing pattern.
Going on with our EUR/USD chart, we can spot a bearish engulfing pattern.
Since we’re still in a range the sellers of the engulfing pattern need to overcome a lot of support/resistance levels that were built-in during the consolidation phase. What happens is that the sellers who got tricked to enter the bearish engulfing pattern are now trapped inside a consolidation zone.
One of the first signs that selling the engulfing pattern was a bad idea could be that we didn’t have enough profit margins.
Smart money love to create these types of price deceptions.
How these price deceptions work is very simple.
The smart money needs to create a sudden price movement so that it attracts the retail eye to enter the market. Once the retail trade bites the bullet, smart money only needs now to bid the market higher and cause everyone to panic. This in return will trigger more sell stops on the upside and subsequently, the upside move gets amplified.
Now, you might be asking yourself why all the fuss to trick the retail traders?
Well, it comes down to two things:
The market is a zero-sum game, so every transaction needs to have a counterparty.
And, secondly, smart money needs liquidity to execute their big trades.
Now, you get the idea of why smart money can use the textbook patterns to trick the retail traders.
Next, we need to establish how the engulfing trader strategy works.
Step #3 How to Fade the Engulfing Pattern
We have a clear signal to enter the market when to price breaks above the high of the bearish engulfing pattern. Normally, traders would sell at the break of the low so we’re doing the exact opposite.
Once the price deception is completed, we can see smart money buying aggressively.
As a general rule, once we break the high of the bearish engulfing pattern, we should see momentum picking up to the upside. If we see this type of price behavior we’re almost sure we have got a good trade.
The next step is to establish how to manage risk, i.e. where to hide our protective stop loss and when to exit the market.
Step #4 Where to Place Stop Loss
The stop-loss strategy is quite simple.
We hide our protective stop loss below the bearish engulfing bar.
If this indeed was a price manipulation set by the smart money, then the price should not break below the bearish engulfing candle low. However, since we can’t be 100% in control of what the market does in the eventuality it breaks below the low we want to get out, which is the stop-loss order job to do for us.
Step #5 Where to Take Profit
Now, in terms of take-profit….
If you want to take your trading to the highest point of success, you need to be able to maximize your profits with each trading opportunity.
The good news is that our take profit strategy is quite easy to implement.
You’ll have to take profits along the way and scale-out of your position as the trend matures. This ensures you’ll benefit from the entire price move.
Conclusion – Engulfing Bar Trading Strategy
In summary, the engulfing pattern trading strategy gives you a chance to trade along with the smart money and profit from trapped retail traders. Most traders will lose money when trading candlestick patterns but with a little bit of twist, you can turn the odds in your favor. And, that’s precisely what our easy guide to trading the engulfing pattern is aiming for.
Here is a summary of what you have learned so far:
The textbook engulfing pattern and how it works.
How to interpret the price manipulation around the engulfing bar.
How to trade along with the smart money.
Only fade the engulfing pattern that develops inside a sideways market.
How to maximize your profits by scaling out of your position.
Engulfing Trading Strategy - The Fade
The engulfing trading strategy will give you the skills you need to become a better trader. Through this guide, we’re going to take a deeper look into what exactly is the engulfing pattern and how understanding this particular pattern can improve your outcomes as a trader. Furthermore, we’re going to show you how to master the engulfing bar trading strategy with a simple twist.
Don’t worry if you already know how engulfing trading works, we have some additional information for you as well. This will strengthen your existing knowledge about the engulfing candle trading strategy and help you find new opportunities to succeed as a trader.
How we interpret the engulfing pattern can provide us with a further understanding of the current market sentiment, whatever form it might take. In return, this can help us better assess the probabilities of success behind each individual bearish and bullish engulfing pattern.
Table of Contents
1 What is the Engulfing Pattern?
2 How to Trade Engulfing Pattern
3 Why the Engulfing Pattern Works?
4 Engulfing Trading Strategy
4.1 Step #1 Spot a Sideways Market
4.2 Step #2 Localize the Engulfing Pattern
4.3 Step #3 How to Fade the Engulfing Pattern
4.4 Step #4 Where to Place Stop Loss and Take Profit
5 Conclusion – Engulfing Bar Trading Strategy
What is the Engulfing Pattern?
In technical analysis, the engulfing pattern is multiple candlestick patterns (2-candle pattern) that can signal a trend reversal or a trend continuation depending on where it develops in relation to the prevailing trend.
While you can find this candlestick price formation by using the engulfing pattern indicator, you can easily spot the pattern with your naked eye.
There are two types of engulfing patterns:
Bullish engulfing pattern.
Bearish engulfing pattern.
Being able to identify the engulfing pattern can help us time the market.
So, how do we identify the bullish engulfing pattern?
The bullish engulfing pattern is a combination of one bearish candlestick followed by a bullish candlestick that engulfs the entire body and wicks of the first candle. This shows that, generally, the broader market is moving in a positive direction.
Naturally, it signals a potential reversal of the prevailing trend.
On the other hand, the bearish engulfing pattern is the opposite of the bullish engulfing pattern. The bearish engulfing pattern can signal the possible start of a new downtrend. While these engulfing patterns do occur in the opposite direction, they are still governed by the same underlying principles.
Moving forward, let’s see the different ways how to trade the engulfing pattern.
How to Trade Engulfing Pattern
To exemplify how the engulfing pattern works, we’re going to showcase how to trade a bearish engulfing pattern. The opposite will be true for the bullish engulfing pattern. Understanding the difference between bullish patterns and bearish patterns will be key to leveraging engulfing patterns to your advantage.
As per the textbook rules, we first need to wait for the second candle of this price formation to close. A close below the low of the first candle shows a stronger bearish signal.
Secondly, the engulfing pattern gets confirmed once we break and close below the low of the second candle. The way we trade it can be broken down into two strategies:
Either sell right away when we break below the low.
Or, a more conservative approach would be to wait for a candle close below the low.
Note* As a general rule, only enter once the pattern is confirmed.
Using strict risk management rules, we can hide our stop loss above the high of the second candle. Usually, the engulfing pattern can boost attractive risk-reward ratios so you can capture profits at least 3 times your risk.
Now, before we reveal the better way to trade the engulfing pattern trading strategy, it’s important to understand what’s going on behind the scene.
What do we mean by this?
Simply put, we want to know the psychology behind the engulfing pattern.
Why the Engulfing Pattern Works?
How we interpret the psychology behind the engulfing pattern plays a big role in whether or not the pattern will work out.
Price Action Strategy is the ultimate indicator telling you what’s going on in the market. In terms of the market sentiment, it’s the only reliable source because the best technical indicators are all based on price action.
When we look at raw price action we can tell who is winning the bulls and bears battle.
The engulfing candle simply signals a big shift in the market sentiment.
So, let’s see what the bullish engulfing pattern is telling us from the supply and demand perspective.
The apparent shift in the supply-demand balance is revealed by the second candle, which shows that the buyers have stepped in and managed to overcome the sellers.
However, as we know it, the price can move higher even from a lack of sellers (supply-side is dry out). That’s the reason why you’ll see that, many times, the candlestick patterns failing more often than not.
The key idea here is that you need to be very selective and only trade the engulfing pattern when it develops at extreme ends of a trend. Truth to be told, the engulfing pattern rarely develops at the end of a trend. Most of the time, you’ll notice this chart pattern popping a lot of the time in the middle of the trend or in a sideways market where a lot of price manipulation happens.
But, what if we can use the engulfing bar trading strategy to take advantage of the price manipulation?
EURUSD - Understanding Candle developmentVideo Idea - To show that will Volume and Stochastic price movement and candlestick development can be predicted. (Also hours of practice)
Objective Attempted - Predict candlestick development and where price will move for 10 Min
Objective Observations - Blind, meaning without candles and stochastic difficult, but with those indicators it was easy.
Objective prediction - Bullish movement EURUSD
Objective results - Successfully predict movement til end of video.
Other video to make from this one: Show how to use 3 Dip Stochastic to predict Bullish Price Movement
Let me know if ya'll would like me to do a live stream of price movement prediction!!! Thanks and follow!!
🎓 EDUCATION 2: STOP Trading (Only) with Technicals ❌Happy Thursday traders! It’s time to continue with our Educational Series on how to become a successful trader with a professional trading approach. It's holiday season, and closed markets mean more time to sharpen our trading skills! Let's go...
In the last post, we touched on the main ingredients of a successful trader (check the link to "related idea"). Let’s reinforce those again:
1. Market Analysis – Your “Analyst” side. Here, you are going to combine Fundamentals, Intermarket analysis, Sentiment analysis, and (the correct) Technical analysis (FIST approach).
2. Trading – Your “Trader” side. Once the analyst in you spots a promising trade idea, the trader in you is responsible to execute the trade with proper entry and exit levels.
3. Management – Your “Manager” side. Every trader is a risk manager. Your manager side is responsible to manage your trade and risk levels, scale in and out of positions, open the correct position sizes, evaluate the reward-to-risk of your trades, etc.
Alright, so far we are still covering your “Analyst” side. Your analyst side determines whether you will buy EURUSD, sell GBPJPY, buy gold, and sell silver. It’s the part of your trading that constantly scans for profitable trade ideas and setups in the markets, and passes them on to your “Trader” side.
Why You Shouldn’t Rely on Technical Analysis?
The majority of new traders I see in the retail space place too much attention on technical analysis. They search the internet for TA articles, look for the “holy grail” indicator, read dozens of technical analysis books, but still don’t manage to improve their trading performance.
The truth is, they don’t understand the markets. I don’t care how many TA books you’ve read in your entire life, if you don’t understand how markets work and what moves prices up and down, you won’t succeed as a trader.
Unfortunately, almost every retail trading website promotes and publishes those articles, because they are attracting clicks of inexperienced traders.
Here is a hint: When I worked in the trading department of a large European bank, I didn’t even look at charts. There are almost no charts and no indicators on the trading floors of big banks and hedge funds!
Do you really think that banks will move hundreds of millions into a trade because the 50-day MA crossed the 100-day MA, or because the price formed a Head & Shoulders pattern? The first time you do this in a bank will likely be your last day as a professional trader.
So why do retail traders trade like that? Because they don’t know of better ways to trade. No one has taught them that trading based purely on technical analysis will never work. It’s in nobody’s interest to teach you this because large market participants need the “dumb money”. Yes, they make a profit when you trade badly and lose money.
So, what’s moving the market if it’s not technicals?
The Forex market is the marketplace for the world’s currencies, and currencies are influenced by supply and demand. To be more precise, interest rates influence currencies, with higher interest rates increasing demand for a currency (therefore leading to higher prices) and lower interest rates decreasing demand for a currency (therefore leading to lower prices.)
We as Forex traders are interest rate traders. We trade currencies based on (short-term) views about their future interest rates. For example, let’s say the market expects higher inflation rates (inflation represents the change in the price of goods and services during a year) in Australia, which could lead to a response from the Reserve Bank of Australia by hiking interest rates. This will create demand for the AUD (remember, global capital is always chasing yield), which in turn would lead to a higher exchange rate of the AUD.
If you only followed technicals and identified a bearish divergence on the RSI in AUD/USD - and you entered short - it’s your fault. The pair would likely move higher on higher interest rate expectations in Australia.
So, when do technical levels work? When the market trades in fair value (in fundamental equilibrium), you’ll find that simple technical rules work. If large market participants agree that the current exchange rate of a currency pair is “fair” given the current fundamentals, smaller players may move the market when the price reaches a support or resistance level, or when the price breaks above or below a triangle. Unfortunately, markets are always in a state of flux and rarely in equilibrium, so following other analytical disciplines (besides technical analysis) will improve your trading performance dramatically.
This chart shows the Band of Agnosticism. This band represents a span of exchange rates where fundamental-based traders are unlikely to join the market because the market is already in a fundamental fair-value zone. As the exchange rate starts to approach the upper or lower band, fundamental-based traders (which happen to be large banks and hedge funds) start considering opening new positions. The volume of their orders pushes the price back inside what is considered fair value.
Professional traders first look at a variety of other factors before they decide what currency pair they want to trade. Once we identify a good trading candidate (our “Analyst” side does that), then it’s time to open the chart and find areas where we could enter with a long position (and those are not trendline breakouts!)
We will cover all of this, step by step, in the coming Educational posts.
Don't forget to FOLLOW to receive all future trade ideas and educational posts!
Happy holidays everyone. 🎆
How to use Camarilla Opening Range Hello traders, Here I shall demonstrate you how you can use Camarilla Weekly Opening range S1 to R1 (in tradingview, otherwise Camarilla levels are marked with H1,2,3,4,5,6 (High) and L1,2,3,4,5,6 (for Low).
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If day, week or month opens and price start trending ABOVE Camarilla Opening Range you look for LONGS, targetting 1. R3 2. R4 3. R5. R5 Final target after breakout of R4, as price rarely makes it to R6 during a week / month. Usually I never target R6 - this is quite unrealistic target (though it might work in supervolatile instruments as bitcoin).
If day, week or month opens and price start trending BELOW Camarilla Opening Range you look for shorts with targets as above.
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You can use Moving averages (best static ones - multitimeframe that do change when you flip charts) to confirm entries.
This system is similiar to Mark Fisher´s Opening Range using the open instead of close (which are typically the same, as candle usually opens where it closed).
This should greatly improve your trading as you will have REALISTIC VOLATILITY BASED TARGETS based on previous close, high and low.
Good luck!
Is the US Dollar dying or dead?In this very busy chart, I compare 6 forex pairs. It needs some study. What seems clear to me is that the USD strength has been heading south manly since March 2020.
This is not unexpected of course, following the FED's money-printing spree, now called QE infinity. I'm not here to say whether that's a good thing or a bad thing.
The overall effect of a weak USD is to keep the US stock indices afloat. I'm not saying that is an intended effect of what the FED is/was doing.
I think the effect is dangerous on both Bond and Stock markets, because at some point people or banks are gonna wake up and wonder 'What's the value of money?'. In a sense that's already happening, as in other posts I've shown that there is movement of value into metals and Bitcoin.
The above are speculative opinions that may well be wrong. This means that you ought not to make decisions based on anything I say.
Disclaimers : This is not advice or encouragement to trade securities on live accounts. Chart positions shown are not suggestions. No predictions and no guarantees supplied or implied. Heavy losses can be expected if trading live accounts. Any previous advantageous performance shown in other scenarios, is not indicative of future performance. If you make decisions based on opinion expressed here or on my profile and you lose your money, kindly sue yourself.
How to trade XRP. 3 Best and simpliest trading strategies. My Friend. Here will be the best patterns that work on Crypto and XRP:
1. False break out of key level
- U should wait for a pullback to a strong key level.
- Better when a false breakout happens after 100% of ATR drop.
example
2. Wage patten
This BNB trade is the best example.
We made 3% within 1 day))
3. Squezeeng to a key level
The best example will be on EUR/USD but it also works on Crypto and XRP.
I just showed you 3 best examples of how can buy XRP. Wait for one of these scenarios.
My Friends, if u want to learn how to trade crypto and make money on it write to us about education. Below this video will be a link which u can use for it. Because we closed the last 2 weeks with 80% of the profit. You also can learn how to do it.
How to use MTF T-Line (8 EMA)T-Line stands for Trigger Line and is 8 EMA, concept invented and taught by American trader Steven Bigalow.
He uses daily 8 EMA and stays in trades as long as price is above or below 8 daily ema. If price closes below or above 8 daily ema in the opposite direction he exits.
I went further with this concept, implementing Multitimeframe 8 ema trading system which is very effective. For that one needs indicator able to plot higher resolution EMAS on lower resolution charts (Moving Average Collection by Wataru Inoue can do that - www.mql5.com - better than TradingvIew MTF ma function). But you need a powerful PC (8 GB RAM at least) as many PC freeze when applying MTF indicators especially on many charts.
For exits, reversal or entries you may add Pivots (Camarilla, Fibonacci Pivots seem to be most effective resistance support levels, especially longterm ones yearly, monthly, weekly). But you are free tp use Ichimoku, daily, monthly, weekly highs, lows or whatever level tools convinient.
At least this system will help you to stay on the right side of the market. This sytem works well with gold, oil, sp500, eurusd, btcusd and many other pairs.
Good luck my friends!
🎓 EDUCATION 1: What Does It Take to Become a Successful Trader?EDU 1: What Does It Take to Become a Profitable Trader?
Hello traders. With this post, I am starting an educational series on TradingView unlike any other. We’ll go through all the aspects and nuances of becoming a professional, consistently profitable, and successful trader.
Now, those are big words. You have likely heard them from various other sources that claimed to teach you the holy grail of trading or that offered some sorts of “secret indicators” that would pave the way to financial freedom.
The truth is, nothing is secretive about successful trading. Thousands of professional traders are consistently profitable, and large institutional traders manage to beat the markets, year over year. The key is learning how to trade the correct way. That’s my trading approach as well: Institutional trading for the retail trader.
I have been fascinated by the markets since the early 2000s. I am not only a self-taught trader, but also have an academic background that has helped me tremendously in understanding market forces and applying them in my daily trading.
I enrolled at the Faculty of Economics in 2008, finished my undergraduate degree in technical analysis and my Master’s degree in fundamental analysis in the FX market.
Since then, I have been following markets daily, created various trading strategies, backtested them, and chose the ones that work best for me.
Alright, now it’s time to finally start the educational part.
What does it take to become a successful trader?
A successful trader is an analyst , trader , and (risk and psychology) manager – all at once.
The analyst side of a trader generates trading ideas, the trader side executes the trades, and the manager side manages both the risk and psychological aspects of trading.
We’ll go through each of them in this educational series.
Trading is not about following technicals all day long. Professional traders and large players in this market don’t buy EUR/USD (or any other pair) when a Moving Average crosses above or below another Moving Average, or when the RSI shows overbought or oversold levels.
Forget about trendlines and wedge patterns for a moment (how many times did you catch a fake breakout trading them?) and open your mind to a trading approach that combines:
Fundamentals
Intermarket analysis
Sentiment analysis
...and (the correct) technical tools
Those disciplines form the cornerstone of what I like to call the FIST analysis. We’ll use technicals only to enter into a trade after we already have a direction derived from the other types of analyses.
So, this educational series will start with your analyst side (FIST), continue with your trader side (process/strategy/execution), and finish with your manager side (managing risks, managing yourself, position-sizing, scaling in and out of positions, etc.).
By the end of the series, you’ll hopefully get a completely different picture of trading than you had before.
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Coming Up: Why Technicals Alone Are Not Enough?