Trend Continuation Patterns with Real-Time ExamplesGood morning, Traders! Today we will make an educational post about the most used corrective patterns. There are numerous patterns, even more complex, such as Elliott counts where each internal wave of corrections is explored, but the reality is that it is not 100% necessary to apply it in the market.
The idea of this information is to provide a simplified, useful and applicable overview. For this, we will explain the corrective patterns and then we will show real-time examples that are being presented in the market at the moment or that have happened recently.
The examples will be in high temporalities so that the charts are valid for a few days/weeks.
One concept that encompasses all the corrective patterns that we are going to talk about is that they are all trend continuation patterns. That is to say, it is a correction that is formed and then continues to the previous trend. That said, in all cases, it is necessary that prior to the pattern, there is an impulse in that direction, that is, if we see a triangle, for it to have an upward resolution it is necessary that the previous trend be upward. While there are some cases where the patterns can go in both directions depending on the context, we won't get into them.
Keep in mind that we ALWAYS have to analyze the context of the pattern correctly. For example, if we see a bullish continuation pattern forming near a major resistance or trend line that could interrupt the price movement, it is clearly not the place to put your money. You should always look for the correct pattern + the appropriate scenario for the trade, where the risk-benefit ratio that we obtain is appropriate.
🔸Pennant Pattern: is a type of continuation pattern formed when there is a large movement in a security, known as the flagpole, followed by a consolidation period with converging trend lines—the pennant—followed by a breakout movement in the same direction as the initial large movement, which represents the second half of the flagpole.
🔸Ascending Triangle: it is created by price moves that allow a horizontal line to be drawn along the swing highs and a rising trendline to be drawn along the swing lows. The two lines form a triangle. Traders often watch for breakouts from triangle patterns.
🔸Flag Pattern: when price moves counter to the prevailing price trend observed in a longer time frame on a price chart. It is named because of the way it reminds the viewer of a flag on a flagpole. The flag pattern is used to identify the possible continuation of a previous trend from a point at which price has drifted against that same trend. Should the trend resume, the price increase could be rapid, making trade timing advantageous by noticing the flag pattern.
🔸Descending Wedge: The wedge pattern is a continuation pattern formed when the price bounces between two downward slopings, converging trendlines. It is considered a bullish chart formation but can indicate both reversal and continuation patterns – depending on where it appears in the trend.
🔸Rectangle: is when the price reaches the same horizontal support and resistance levels multiple times. The price is confined to moving between the two horizontal levels, creating a rectangle.
Real-Time examples:
AUD/USD Descending Wedge:
EUR/GBP Rectangle:
EUR/NZD Rectangle:
GBP/USD Flag:
NZD/USD Flag:
USD/JPY Flag:
J-EUR
How to trade round numbersRound numebrs are liquidity levels, where price usually STUMBLES OR REVERSES.
Trends move between round numbers and can be identified using closing prices (line chart).
To identify uptrend you connect DISTINCT higher lows on line chart
To identify downtrend you connect DISTINCT lower highs on line chart
🎓 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!
🎓 EDU 3 of 20: Here is What Moves the Forex Market 📈EDU 3 of 20: What Moves the Forex Market?
Hello traders! First of all, I wish you a merry Christmas and a happy holiday season.
Now that markets are closed and liquidity is thin, we have got some time to learn more about what it takes to become a successful Forex trader. In the last educational post (2 of 20), we have covered why you shouldn’t rely only on technical analysis in your trading. That’s the most common mistake that new traders make! They follow only charts, and trade when they see a trendline breakout, triangle breakout, MA crossover, or any other signal that won’t return consistent profits over the long run.
Professional traders in banks and other large market participants don’t trade with technical analysis! We do use technical levels to find appropriate entry and exit levels, but we will never enter into a trade because of a simple trendline breakout! That’s why institutional traders make millions in the markets, and the average retail trader loses 90% of its capital within 90 days of trading.
My mission is to teach you how to trade like a professional trader. So, what are my credentials to claim this? I am a full-time profitable trader and follow the markets since 2008, I worked in the trading department and have first-hand experience, and my passion for the markets helped me to gain academic degrees in financial markets (MSc in fundamental analysis of currency markets.)
So, what moves the Forex market? What causes the EUR/USD pair, for example, to move from 1.15 to 1.20? Here are the main determinants in the short-term, medium-term, and long-term.
Short-term determinants:
1. Trend-following behavior and herding effect : Market participants tend to buy into uptrends and sell into downtrends, which accelerates the original moves and causes the trend to continue.
2. Investor sentiment : When investors are bullish on a currency, they tend to buy. When they are bearish, they tend to sell. There are ways to measure investor sentiment in the market, and we’ll cover this later in our educational series (hint: We use the futures and options markets to measure investor sentiment)
3. Risk appetite : When investors are willing to take on risk (risk-on), they tend to buy riskier high-yielding assets, such as stocks and high-beta currencies like the AUD and NZD. When they are risk-averse, they tend to park their capital in safe-havens (“Flight to Quality”) such as bonds, gold, the JPY and the CHF. If you can measure the current risk appetite, this can help you identify great day trading opportunities.
4. Market positioning : Certain groups of market participants take longer to change their positions, while others are quicker in rebalancing their portfolios. When large players show a tendency to buy a certain currency, we can expect higher prices for the currency in the future. Real money (like pension funds) are less price-sensitive, while smart money (like hedge funds) are more price-sensitive and quicker in identifying new market trends.
Medium-term determinants :
1. Real interest rate differentials : Currencies follow interest rates, and Forex traders are basically interest rate traders. The real interest rate differential between two countries tends to be a leading indicator of future exchange rate movements. The real interest rate represents the nominal interest rate minus the current inflation rate.
We follow the real interest rate differential of 10-year government bonds of respective countries (like between the UK and the US for the GBP/USD pair) to get a hint of where the currency pair is heading to.
2. Monetary and fiscal policy : Changes in monetary and fiscal policy can create strong and long-lasting trends in the Forex market. Usually, a tighter monetary policy will put buying pressure in a currency, while looser monetary policy will exert selling pressure in the currency. Tighter fiscal policy is usually bearish for a currency, while looser fiscal policy (i.e. more public investments) is usually bullish for a currency (at least until more fiscal spending starts to negatively impact a country’s budget deficit, which is then bearish for a currency!)
3. Trends in the current account : Countries that run a current account surplus (i.e. they export more than they import) often see their currency appreciate (rise in value) because of capital inflows and higher foreign demand for their currency.
A typical example for this is Japan in the 80s and 90s (When the US imported Toyotas, they had to buy Japanese yens to pay for them). Countries that have a current account deficit (i.e. they import more than they export) see capital outflows, which then lead to currency depreciation (fall in value).
Long-term determinants :
1. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) : The PPP is a macro-economic principle that says that different currencies need to have the same purchasing power over time. Let’s say a Porsche costs 100,000 pounds in the UK, and 120,000 USDs in the US. If the current GBP/USD rate is 1.40, a buyer from the UK could exchange 100,000 pounds to 140,000 USDs and buy the Porsche in the US for 120,000 USDs.
Over time, this demand for US dollars will cause the GBP/USD exchange rate to fall towards 1.20, which is the Real Exchange Rate according to the PPP. Of course, the buyer has to take into account import taxes and shipping costs to the UK, as well as the time required to complete the purchase and import the car. We also have to make the assumption that Porsches are the same and have the same built quality in the UK and the US. It can take years until a currency pair finally moves towards its PPP equilibrium level.
Fun fact : The Economist magazine has created the Bic Mac Index, which compares the prices of a McDonald’s Big Mac in different countries to calculate the PPP exchange rate for different currencies.
2. Terms of Trade : Terms of Trade for a country measures the trends in prices for imports and exports. For example, when oil rises, oil exporting countries will experience a positive trend in their Terms of Trade and likely see their currencies rise in value (take Canada for example.) On the other side, countries that rely on cheap oil will likely see their currencies fall in value when the price of oil rises (India for example.)
In the upcoming educational posts, we'll combine the most important currency determinants into an effective framework used by professional traders: The FIST analysis.
The stuff I deliver here for free is world-class trading education! There isn't anything like this on the world wide web, and you'll learn a full and profitable trading framework (analysis + execution + risk management) used by professional traders!
We are still developing your "Analyst brain", and will then move on to your "Trader brain" (execution) and "Manager brain" (risk and money management) in this fully free 20-part Educational Series!
Upcoming post: Introduction to FIST Trading
Don't forget to FOLLOW and LIKE to receive new posts! Also, if you have any questions, let me know in the comment section below.
Happy holidays again!
🎓 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. 🎆
🎓 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.
If you find this trading educational series useful, please follow and hit the “LIKE” button.
Have questions? Post them in the comment section below.
Coming Up: Why Technicals Alone Are Not Enough?
A system for speculationThere are seven ways to improve the art of speculation.
Latest cheatsheet:
1. 🔎 Find your price driver - build a macro argument based on probabilities
How good is the quality of the price driver? If I look at the BOE and ECB, how wide is the divergence?
We are looking for chalk and cheese, opposites attract.
2. 🖐 Execution is important - most get stopped out where they should enter
The key to great execution is being able to assess market participation and price action.
3. 🛠 Start small and leverage winners - from one brick build a house
Reverse engineer the retail blow ups! Start with a core unit, when it starts to pay, and the drivers are working, you can add some more. Treat it like a business!
4. ❓ Has anything changed - reassess trades everyday at the roll
Don't think about the chart here, focus on the macro drivers. Are negative rates still in play for BOE? or have they changed their view on No-deal countermeasures?
5. ⛓ Remain nimble - do not get married to a position
If we don't like what we see, if BOE turns hawkish, then we can just take the position off. Understand where is enough and admit where you are done.
6. 💫 Stay in the moment - perception matters more than reality
If you can understand and outguess how perception will change, then you will be very profitable. Where's the sweet spot? How is the market positioned?
7. 😬 A life and death showdown - everyday is high noon in the markets
Market participants are profoundly into the game. So much so that everything else in life seems unimportant.
Threadneedle Street becomes the world as your opponent will keep trying to outmanoeuvre.
How to take advantage of a trade multiple times? Check it out!Hi guys!
Just published my very first educational post, I hope you will like it!
This is a trade which I took yesterday and I thought it would be interesting to "dissect" it into 4 steps in order to understand why and when is the "best" moment to buy and/or to sell.
I have incorporated the explanations in my chart.
Please note that this is an "ideal" trade and it doesn't happen like that all the time... but it gives you an idea of how I analyze it.
Feel free to comment/like it if you find it valuable!
Head and shoulders typesHello my friend | Welcome Back.
Please support this idea with LIKE if you find it useful.
***
The head and shoulders chart pattern is a popular and easy to spot pattern in technical analysis that shows a baseline with three peaks, the middle peak being the highest. The head and shoulders chart depicts a bullish-to-bearish trend reversal and signals that an upward trend is nearing its end.
The pattern appears on all time frames and can, therefore, be used by all types of traders and investors. Entry levels, stop levels and price targets make the formation easy to implement, as the chart pattern provides important and easy to see levels.
EURUSD: Long Term Perspective & Trend Analysis
hey guys,
I know that many of you are expecting a coming bearish movement on a daily on EURUSD.
analyzing a weekly time frame though, I want to warn you that the pair has still much space for a bullish continuation.
on a weekly, the price is clearly trading in a global bearish trend.
spring's covid bullish rally made the market set a higher low and triggered a bullish rally,
and it looks like a long term goal for buyers is 1.21 - 1.25 wide supply cluster.
this zone is based on 2008'th, 2010'th, 2012'th lows and 2018'th high.
in my view, a strong weekly bearish movement will most likely start from that area.
however, what makes me extremely cautious is the recent higher low.
usually, it is the first strong signal of a coming trend change.
if the above-mentioned zone is broken buy buyers, It will signify a long term bearish trend violation and start of a new long term bullish trend.
as always we can only speculate about the probabilities of both events.
but clearly decision point is close.
A simple flow indicatorAn alternative way of assessing currency flow is the ratio between the ETFs of each currency. For example, the EZU that gives exposure to a developed market countries using the Euro currency, divided by IVV that gives exposure to large, established U.S. companies.
The direction of this ratio shows us whether companies in one country (or region) are growing faster than the other. The greater the growth of companies, the greater the country growth and productivity, which creates a virtuous cycle and currency appreciation.
Multi Timeframe Analysis - different supply/demand levelsHello all,
this lesson will be about my monthly/weekly, daily, 4h etc. supply/demands critical areas, so you can get a better idea why i use them. After you know the most basic thing about my analysis, we can start with the next baby steps in understanding price direction.
This also goes for all of the structures such as closed triangles, trendlines etc. on the higher timeframes.
I prefer using the term "supply and demands" since it is the correct one in economics. In other words supply and demand can be seen in every single product that is offered in a market.
Sorry for my mistakes, it took me more than 15 recording in order to get this one. Thank you!
Have a great trading week!
EURUSD: Year's High AHEAD!!! Key Levels & Scenarios
EURUSD is approaching a key daily structure resistance.
1.15 is year's high, short rally from that level was just crazy in march.
we don't know how the market will react this time, so we must be prepared for both scenarios:
in case of a bullish violation of the underlined resistance (daily higher high higher close)
the pair will most likely keep growing.
next midterm resistances will be:
1.155
1.160
if the structure will be respected (some reversal formation on lower timeframes)
the market may retrace.
closest midterm supports will be:
1.137
1.130
of course, bias right now is bullish, but it is too late to jump in.
let's patiently wait and see whats gonna happen.
EURGBP: Key Levels & Structure Analysis
hey guys,
EURGBP has broken above a key daily structure last week.
Here are the key levels from where we will be looking for new trading opportunities.
0.90 - recent resistance that turned to support after a breakout
0.93 - major resistance and 2019's high
0.95 - major resistance and 2020's high
just in case of the start of a selling rally here are the key supports:
0.87 - mid-term 2020's support
0.83 - major support and 2020's low
the safest and the most accurate trading opportunities are always on key levels.
let the market reach on of those and then look for a signal.
EURUSD: Key Levels
EURUSD started a strong bullish movement.
Multiple strong resistances are ahead.
Key levels based on 3 days chart analysis:
Resistance 1 - 1.11 level based on a resistance line of a major channel + horizontal 3 days/daily structure
Resistance 2 - 1.12 level based on a horizontal weekly/3 days/daily structure
Resistance 3 - 1.15 levels based on a horizontal weekly/3 day/daily structure + it is this year's high
Closest supports are:
Support 1 - 1.0975 level based on a recently broken daily structure
Support 2 - 1.08 level based on a horizontal 3 days/daily structure
pay attention to the lower timeframe once the market reaches one of these levels to catch a pullback or reverse