GOLD - Wait For The Bulls!Hello TradingView Family / Fellow Traders. This is Richard, as known as theSignalyst.
on WEEKLY: Left Chart
GOLD is approaching a support zone and round number 1800. So we will be looking for buy setups on lower timeframes.
on H1: Right Chart
XAUUSD is bearish from a short-term perspective trading inside the falling red channel.
🏹 Trigger => for the bulls to take over, we need a new swing high to form around the upper red trendline and then a break above it.
Meanwhile, until the buy is activated, GOLD can still trade lower till the 1800 support.
📚 Always follow your trading plan regarding entry, risk management, and trade management.
Good luck!
All Strategies Are Good; If Managed Properly!
~Rich
CFD
Gold Price Prediction at the Announcement of CPI Data ReleaseSo I predict that there will be a bounce towards the price of 1880, after that whether immediately or slowing down, Gold will decline again. The profit target is at the price of 1776.
Note: Remember, this is not financial advice. Always follow your own analysis. Thank you and good luck.
EXPLAINED: Gearing and how it worksThere is one tool with trading, which you can accelerate your portfolio, compared to with investing.
I’m talking about Gearing (or leverage).
To wrap our head around this concept, here’s a more relatable life example.
When you buy a house for R1,000,000, it is very similar to trading derivatives. Initially, the homeowner most probably won’t have the full R1,000,000 to buy the house with just one purchase.
Instead, they’ll sign a bond agreement, make a 10% deposit (R100,000), borrow the rest from the bank and be exposed to the full purchase price of the home. This is a similar concept for when you trade with gearing.
Gearing is a tool which allows you to pay a small amount of money (deposit) in order to gain control and be exposed to a larger sum of money.
You’ll simply buy a contract of the underlying share, use borrowed money to trade with and be exposed to the full share’s value.
Let’s simplify this with a more relatable life example:
How gearing works with CFDs
Let’s say you want to buy 1,000 shares of Jimbo’s Group Ltd at R50 per share as you believe the share price is going to go up to R60 in the next three months. You’ll need to pay the entire R50,000 to own the full value of the 1,000 shares (R50 X 1,000 shares).
In three months’ time, if the share price hits R60 you’ll then be exposed to R60,000 (1,000 shares X R60 per share).
Note: I’ve excluded trading costs for simplicity purposes throughout this section
If you sold all your shares, you’ll be up R10,000 profit (R60,000 – R50,000). The problem is you had to pay the full R50,000 to be exposed to those 1,000 shares.
When you trade a geared instrument like CFDs, you won’t ever have to worry about paying the full value of a share again.
A CFD is an unlisted over-the-counter financial derivative contract between two parties to exchange the price difference of the opening and closing price of the underlying asset.
Let’s break that down into an easy-to-understand definition.
A CFD (Contract For Difference) is an
Unlisted (You don’t trade through an exchange)
Over The Counter (Via a private dealer or market maker)
Financial derivative contract (Value from the underlying market)
Between two parties (The buyer and seller) to
Exchange the
Price difference of the opening and closing price of the
Underlying asset (Instrument the CFD price is based on)
Let’s use an example of a company called Jimbo’s Group Ltd, who offers the function to trade CFDs.
The initial margin (deposit) requirement is 10% of the share’s value. This means, you’ll pay R5.00 per CFD instead of R50, and you’ll be exposed to the full value of the share.
To calculate the gearing (or leverage ratio) you’ll simply divide what you’ll be exposed to over the initial margin deposit.
Here’s the gearing calculation on a per CFD basis:
Gearing
= (Exposure per share ÷ Initial deposit per CFD)
= (R50 per share ÷ R5.00 per CFD)
= 10 times gearing
This means two things…
#1. For every one Jimbo’s Group Ltd CFD you buy for R5.00 per CFD, you’ll be exposed to 10 times more (the full value of the share).
#2. For every one cent the share rises or falls, you’ll gain or lose 10 cents.
To have the exposure of the full 1,000 shares of Jimbo’s Group Ltd, you’ll simply need to buy 1,000 CFDs. This will require a deposit of R5,000 (1,000 CFDs X R5.00 per CFD).
With a 10% margin deposit (R5,000), you’d have the exact same exposure as you’d have with a conventional R50,000 shares’ investment.
Here is the calculation you can use to work out the exposure of the trade.
Overall trade exposure
= (Total initial margin X Gearing)
= (R5,000 X 10 times)
= R50,000
With an initial deposit of R5,000 and with a gearing of 10 times, you’ll be exposed to the full R50,000 worth of shares.
In three months’ if the share price reaches R60, your new overall trade exposure will be R60,000 worth of shares (1,000 shares X R60 per share). If you sold all of your positions, you’d bank a R10,000 gain (R60,000 – R50,000).
But remember, you only deposited R5,000 into your trade and not the full R50,000. This is the beauty of trading geared derivative instruments.
If you want any other technical trading or fundamental term explained, please comment below. I'm happy to help.
Trade well, live free
Timon
MATI Trader
Feel free to follow my socials below.
FTR Setup - LongWhat is FTR?
FTR in forex refers to fail to return. An important price action term used to do technical analysis of currency pairs in forex.
Simply by its mean, price broke an important level but failed to return from that level. It is called FTR (fail to return).
In the picture, I tried to explain this important trading setup simply and completely.
2% Rule with CFDs versus Spread TradingThe rule is very easy to understand.
Whether you trade using CFDs or Spread Betting, the rule is the same.
Never risk more than 2% of your portfolio on any one trade.
It’s one rule that you can use whether you have a R1,000 account or a R10,000,000 account.
You see, trading is a forever business.
This means, as a trader you should risk as little of your portfolio as possible in order to stay in the game longer.
We’ll now go straight into how you to enter your CFDs and Spread Betting trades using the 2% rule.
How to enter your CFD trade using the 2% Rule
Here are the specifics for the trade
CFD of the underlying Company: TIM Ltd CFDs
Portfolio value: R100,000
2% Max risk per CFD trade: R2,000
Entry price: R400.00
Stop loss price: R380.00
To calculate the no. of CFDs you’ll buy per trade, you’ll need the:
~ Max risk per trade
~ Entry Price and
~ Stop loss price
Next, you’ll need to follow two steps:
Step #1:
Calculate the risk in trade
The ‘risk in trade’ is the price difference between where you enter and where your stop loss is:
Risk in trade = (Entry price – Stop loss price)
= (R400 – R380)
= R20
Step #2:
Calculate the no. of CFDs to buy
No. of CFDs to buy = (2% Risk ÷ Risk in trade)
= (R2,000 ÷ R20)
= 100 CFDs
In your platform you’ll type in 100 TIM CFDs to buy, place your entry price at R400 and your stop loss price at R380 to risk only 2% of your portfolio.
Note: 1 CFD = 1 Share exposure
100 CFDs = 100 Shares exposure
How to enter your Spread Trade using the 2% Rule
With spread trading you trade on a ‘value per 1 point’ basis.
You’ll choose either: R0.01, R0.10, R1 or any other amount per 1 cent movement in the underlying market.
If you choose R0.10 value per 1 cent movement, for every 10 cents the market moves against or for you, you’ll lose or gain 100 cents (10 cents value per point X 10 cents movement).
Here are the specifics for the spread trade.
Contract of the underlying Company: TIM Ltd
Portfolio value: R100,000
2% Max risk per Spread trade: 200,000c (R2,000)
Entry price: 40,000c (R400.00)
Stop loss price: 38,000c (R380.00)
To calculate the ‘Value Per Point’ to enter your long (buy) trade, you’ll need the:
~ Max risk per trade
~ Entry Price
~ Stop loss price
Next, you’ll need to follow two steps:
Step #1:
Calculate the risk in trade
Risk in trade = (Entry price – Stop loss price)
= (40,000c – R38,000c)
= 2,000c (R20.00)
Step #2:
Value per 1 cent movement
Value per 1 cent movement
= (2% Risk ÷ Risk in trade)
= (200,000c ÷ 2,000c)
= 100c (R1.00)
This means, with a ‘Value per point of 100c’ every 1 cent the TIM Ltd share price moves, you’ll make or lose 100 cents.
Every 2,000c the market moves, you’ll make or lose 200,000c or R2,000 of your portfolio (100c Value per 1 cent movement X 2,000c movement).
Note:
1 Cent per 1 cent movement = 1 Share exposure
100 Cents per 1 cent movement = 100 Shares exposure
EXPLAINED: How Gearing Works with CFDs and Spread TradingNot sure what happened but the image didn't show. Here it is again...
This is the most important concept you’ll need to understand to accelerate your account.
During your trading experience, with gearing, you’ll learn how to multiply your profits. But you can also multiply your losses, if you don’t know what you’re doing.
So listen up.
What Gearing is in a nutshell…
Gearing also known as leverage or margin trading, is the function that allows you to pay a small amount of money, in order to gain control and be exposed to a larger sum of money.
There is a very simple calculation you’ll use calculate the gearing for both CFDs and Spread Trading.
Exposure
Initial margin
In order to understand this formula, let’s use three gearing examples with shares versus CFDs and Spread Trading.
We’ll break it up into three steps for CFDs and Spread Trading:
1. Calculate the entry market exposure
2. Calculate the initial margin (Deposit)
3. Calculate the gearing
We’ll also exclude costs to help simplify the gearing concept better.
EXAMPLE 1:
Buying AAS Ltd shares
Portfolio value: R100,000
Company: AAS Ltd
Share price: R109.00
No. shares to buy: 100
If you buy one share at R109 per share, you’ll be exposed to R109 worth of one share.
If you buy 100 shares at R109 per share, you’ll be exposed to R10,900 worth of shares (100 shares X R109 per share).
We know that to be exposed to the full R10,900 worth of shares, we needed to pay an initial margin (deposit) of R10,900.
If we plug in values into the gearing formula, we get.
Gearing = (Exposure ÷ Initial Margin)
= (R10,900 ÷ R10,900)
= 1:1
This means, there is NO gearing or a gearing of 1 times, with the share example as, what we paid is exactly as what we are exposed to.
Easy enough? Let’s move onto CFDs.
EXAMPLE 2:
Buying AAS Ltd CFDs
Portfolio value: R100,000
CFD of the underlying Company: AAS Ltd CFD
Share price: R109.00
Margin % per CFD: 10%
(NOTE: Find out on your trading platform or ask your broker for the margin % per CFD)
No. CFDs to buy: 100
Step #1:
Calculate the entry exposure of the CFD
Entry exposure
= (Share price X No. CFDs)
= (R109.00 X 100 CFDs)
= R10,900
NOTE:
1 CFD per trade, you’ll be exposed to the value of one share.
100 CFDs per trade, you’ll be exposed to the value of 100 shares.
Step #2:
Calculate the initial margin of the CFD trade
Initial margin
= (Exposure X Margin % per CFD)
= (R10,900 X 0.10)
= R1,090
This means to buy 100 CFDs, you’ll need to pay an initial margin (deposit) of R1,090.
Step #3:
Calculate the gearing of the CFD trade
Gearing = (Exposure ÷ Initial margin)
= (R10,900 ÷ R1,090)
= 10 times
With a gearing of 10 times, this means two things…
#1: For every one CFD you buy for R10.90 per CFD, you’ll be exposed to 10 times more or the value of one AAS Ltd share.
#2: For every one cent the share price rises or falls, you’ll gain or lose 10 cents.
EXAMPLE 2:
Buying AAS Ltd CFDs
Portfolio value: R100,000
Underlying Company: AAS Ltd
Share price: 10,900c
Value per point: 100c (R1.00)
Margin % per Spread Trading contract: 7.50%
(NOTE: Find out on your trading platform or ask your broker for the margin % per share contract)
Step #1:
Calculate the entry exposure of the spread trade
Entry exposure
= (Share price X Value per point)
= (10,900c X 100c)
= 1,090,000 (R10,900)
Note:
1c value per point per spread trade– you’ll be exposed to one AAS share
100c value per point per spread trade – you’ll be exposed to 100 AAS shares
Step #2:
Calculate the initial margin of the spread trade
Initial margin
= (Exposure X Initial margin)
= (1,090,000c X 0.075)
= 81,750c (R817.50)
This means, you’ll need to pay an initial margin (deposit) of R817.50 to be exposed to R10,900 worth of AAS Ltd shares.
Step #3:
Calculate the gearing of the spread trade
Gearing = (Exposure ÷ Initial margin)
= (1,090,000 ÷ 81,750c)
= 13.33 times
This means, by depositing R817.50 you’ll be exposed to 13.33 times more or R10,900 (R817.50 X 13.33 times) worth of AAS Ltd shares.
You now know how gearing works with CFDs and Spread Trading, in the next lesson we’ll cover how to never risk more than 2% of your portfolio for each CFD and Spread Trade you take.
Did you enjoy this article?
Trade well, live free.
Timon Rossolimos
Feel free to follow our socials below for more.
EXPLAINED: CFDs versus Spread Trading 101What are CFDs and Spread Trading?
Spread Trading (betting) and CFDs are financial instruments that allow us to do one thing.
To place a bet on whether a market will go up or down in price – without owning the underlying asset.
If we are correct, we stand a chance to make magnified profits and vice versa if wrong.
Both CFDs and Spread Trading, allow us to buy or sell a huge variety of markets including:
• Stocks
• Currencies
• Commodities
• Crypto-currencies and
• Indices.
When you have chosen a market to trade, there are two types of CFD or Spread Trading positions you can take.
You can buy (go long) a market at a lower price as you expect the price to go up where you’ll sell your position at a higher price for a profit.
You can sell (go short) a market at a higher price as you expect the price to go down where you’ll buy your position at a lower price for a profit.
EXPLAINED: CFDs for Dummies
DEFINITION:
A CFD is an unlisted over-the-counter financial derivative contract between two parties to exchange the price difference between the opening and closing price of the underlying asset.
Let’s break that down into an easy-to-understand definition.
EASIER DEFINITION:
A CFD (Contract For Difference) is an:
• Unlisted (You don’t trade through an exchange)
• Over The Counter (Via a private dealer or market maker)
• Financial derivative contract (Value from the underlying market)
• Between two parties (The buyer and seller) to
• Exchange the
• Price difference (Of the opening and closing price) of the
• Underlying asset (Instrument the CFD price is based on)
EASIEST DEFINITION
Essentially, you’ll enter into a CONTRACT at one price, close it at another price FOR a profit or a loss depending on the price DIFFERENCE (between your entry and exit).
Moving onto Spread Trading.
EXPLAINED: Spread Trading for Dummies
DEFINITION:
Spread Trading is a derivative method to place a trade with a chosen bet size per point on the movement of a market’s price.
EASIER DEFINITION:
Spread Trading is a:
Derivative method (Exposed to an underlying asset) to
Place a trade (Buy or sell) with a chosen
Bet size per point on where you expect a
Market price will
Move (Up or down)
In value
EASIEST DEFINITION:
Spread Betting allows you to place a BET size on where you expect a market to move in price.
Each point the market moves against or for you, you’ll win or lose money based on their chosen TRADING bet size (a.k.a Risk per point or cent movement).
The higher the bet size (value per point), the higher your risk and reward.
The costs you WILL pay with Spread Trading and CFDs
Both Spread Trading and CFDs are geared-based derivative financial instruments.
As their values derive from an underlying asset, when you trade using Spread Trading or CFDs, you never actually own any of the assets.
You’re just making a simple bet on whether you expect a market price to rise or fall in the future.
If you decide to go with the broker or market maker who offers CFDs or Spread Trading, there are certain costs you’ll need to pay.
Costs with Spread Trading
With Spread Trading, you’ll only have one cost to pay – which are all included in – the spread.
The spread is the price difference between the bid (buying price) and the offer (selling price).
EXAMPLE: Let’s say you enter a trade and the bid and offer prices is 5,550c – 5,610c.
The spread, in this case, is 60c (5,610c – 5,550c).
This means your trade has to move 60c to cross the spread in order for you to be in the money-making territory. Also, if the trade goes against you, the spread will also add to your losses.
Why the spread you ask?
The spread is where the brokers (market makers’) make their money.
Costs with CFDs
Brokerage
With CFDs, it can be different.
Depending on who you choose to trade CFDs with, you may need to cover both the spread as well as the brokerage fees – when you trade.
These brokerage fees can range from 0.2% – 0.60% for when you enter (leg in) and exit (leg out) a trade.
NOTE: If the minimum brokerage per trade is R100, you’ll have to pay R100 to enter your trade.
Daily Interest Finance Charge
The other (negligible) cost, you’ll need to cover is the daily financing charges.
If you buy (go long) a trade, you’ll have to pay this negligible charge (0.02% per day) to hold a trade overnight.
However, if you sell (go short) a CFD trade, you’ll then receive this negligible amount (0.009%) to hold a short trade overnight.
The costs you WON’T pay as a Spread Trader
With spread trading (betting), you don’t own anything physical.
When you take a spread bet, you’re simply making a financial bet on where you expect the price to move and nothing else.
This means, there will be no costs to pay as you would with shares including:
NO Daily Interest Finance charges
NO Stamp Duty costs
NO Capital Gains Tax
NO Securities Transfer Tax
NO Strate
NO VAT
NO Brokerage (all wrapped in the spread).
The costs you WON’T pay as a CFD trader
With CFDs, you’ll notice that there are similar costs with Spread Trading that you won’t have to pay including:
NO Stamp Duty costs
NO Securities Transfer Tax
NO Settlement and clearing fees
NO VAT
NO Strate
24-Hour Dealings
The great thing about Spread Betting or CFD trading is that, you can trade markets trade 24/5.
I’m talking about currencies, commodities and indices.
And with Crypto-currencies you can trade them 24 hours a day seven days a week.
I have left out a very important difference between CFDs and Spread Trading… Gearing and how it works in real life…
Q. How do you work out CFD Interest Swaps with an example?Q. How do you work out CFD Interest Swaps with an example?
Answer: CFDs is an instrument where you pay a small amount of money to be exposed to the full value of the share.
With CFDs, there are daily charges when you buy and daily income interest that you receive when you sell (go short).
The charge is known as a ‘daily swap’ or ‘daily interest charge’.
You can ask your broker what the annual interest swap rate is or you’ll most likely be able to find it on your platform…
With my broker for example, the long swap (for when you buy) is -9.47% per year.
And the short swap (for when you sell) is 2.71%.
With your Shoprite trade, because you’re buying CFDs (which is a geared instrument), you’re essentially borrowing the money from the bank.
This means, you have to pay interest on the borrowed funds (in order to be exposed to the full value).
Those are the ‘swaps’ we’re talking about.
Let’s say the Shoprite share is trading at R223.19 and the margin (initial deposit) to buy 1 CFD is 9.7% (R21.70).
This means, when you buy 1 CFD for R21.70, you’ll be exposed to the full R223.19 worth of the share.
If you buy 100 CFDs and pay R2,170 (100 CFDs X R21.70) you’ll be exposed to the full R22,319 worth of shares (100 shares X 223.19).
And if you sold the 100 CFDs at R236.00, you would have been exposed to R23,600.
On that R22,319 exposure, you’ll pay 9.47% (R2,113.60) interest (swap) per year.
But luckily as traders, you don’t need to worry about paying the full amount, as we like to hold only for a short period of time.
This means, each day you hold the CFD with exposure of R22,319 – you’ll only pay R5.49.
(Exposure of your trade X 9.47%) ÷ 365 days.
If the exposure never changed and you held onto your trade at the same share price you would pay R54.90 (after 10 days).
However, we know that share prices move up and down each day.
The higher the market goes up, the higher your exposure where you’ll pay slightly more.
If the market price drops, you will pay slightly less.
However, as traders we don’t tend to hold for more than a couple of days or weeks to curb the daily interest charges.
If you have any other questions please ask in the comments :)
Trade well, live free.
Timon
MATI Trader
✅NAS100 MOVE DOWN AHEAD|SHORT🔥
✅NAS100 went up to retest a horizontal resistance level
Which makes me locally bearish biased
And I think that a move down
From the level is to be expected
Towards the target below
SHORT🔥
✅Like and subscribe to never miss a new idea!✅
✅NAS100 BUYING OPPORTUNITY|LONG🚀
✅NAS100 broke the falling resistance
So after the pullback and retest
A move up is to be expected
To retest the level above
LONG🚀
✅Like and subscribe to never miss a new idea!✅
GOLD SHORTWe have a descending channel and with the indicators BB the middle line, and the EMA, we can clearly see the pattern will continue, at least until the orange box, because could be the next support, where we can find at 1622.564 the first, or the second one with the LL at 1616.888.
However take a look the the FED speech!!
NAS100 short - London sessionAsian Manipulation, BOS, retracement and imbalance filled. Aiming at the sellside liquidity below for a 1 to 3 risk-reward ratio.
NGCUSDT breakout +2000% possible Gains!
Hey traders,
The chart shows a Positive divergence in the RSI indicator.
The NGCUSDT price is testing the daynamic daily resistance & 4H channel .
You can see the broken downtrend line.
I think this coin is a great choice and even if you buy for only 5% - 10% of your funds, it can be a smart bet.
Will it reach the moon?
Do not forget to use Stop loss.
Please like and share.
Thank you.
EURNZD Double bottom BreakoutThe idea here is about Forex: Euro/New Zealand Dollar (EURNZD).
My view is bullish short term for the above mentioned pair due to the below observed technical factors.
Points as per TA on a Weekly Chart:
1. Double Bottom pattern completed and neckline broken on weekly chart and the target goes the same distance as the height of the pattern, up from the neckline as below:
2. Broken out of downtrend long back with false breakout and breakdown on weekly chart as below:
3. Support Established on 200 EMA as below :
4. Possible Butterfly pattern CD leg under formation and min Fibonacci distance from XD is 1.272 as below which can is considered as future target price:
5. Trading above 20 & 200 EMA on Daily chart.
6. Kumo Twist & Breakout on a daily chart is Strong and on weekly kumo twist is neutral & Kumo breakout is currently consolidating.
7. RSI is at 73.14 on a daily and 66.31 on weekly chart at the time of publishing.
8. MACD way above signal line on weekly & daily chart.
9. Hull Moving Average & other Moving average is a strong Buy Signal on Daily, Weekly & monthly chart.
10. ADX is at 54.46 on daily chart (ADX Value above 50 is considered as very strong trend) & 13.19 on weekly chart (ADX value below 25 is considered as absent or weak trend).
11. Volume Spike in weekly chart signals strong Momentum.
Projected targets provided in chart.
Stop Loss: provided in Chart.
Note: Please bear with me if there is anything which I might have missed. Since, I am publishing my first TA on Forex.
Disclaimer: “The above is an Educational idea only and not any kind of financial or investment advice. So please do your own DD (Due Diligence) before any kind of investment”.
Do you like my TA & ideas!!
Want to keep yourself updated with current market action? Then don’t forget boost & to subscribe for more analysis. Do leave your valuable feedback
& comments for any improvisations.
Cheers.