USDCAD 4h Educational PostObserve the chart for a moment, and you will see the support trendline.
Now, price on the 4h candles has broken below this support trendline, but has never closed below it.
After the first three points on the trendline, illustrated by the first 3 circles, the trendline was established as valid.
(It generally is considered that 3 points are necessary for a level to be valid)
After the 3 points, the trendline was established, and even though there were 2 more circles after that, where candles went below the trendline, the 4h candles still closed above. The wicks in the last 2 points indicate that bulls reversed price in time for the 4h candle to close.
This trading week closed pretty nice for this pair, the third to last candle's lower shadow is as long as the body, and the following candle is very strongly bullish.
Therefore, I will be looking at a long position next week.
A lesson one could take away from this is that you should never take a trade that uses an unclosed candle, because it still has time to form completely differently, and it is a mistake that is very easy to avoid.
- For example, look at the two candles in the fourth circle: sure price went 30 pips below the trendline, but it did not close there. I can already tell you that there were traders that took this short position without waiting for that candle to close. Patience is key.
Another lesson is that higher time frames take precedence over shorter ones. One should not trade a 5 minute double top formation on a 1h or 4h,200 pip uptrend.
Priceaction
GBPCAD - Price Action Case Study - Multiple Time FramesGreetings Fellow Traders,
Price Action, Support and Resistance are a very critical part of trading and always aid in the removal of emotions from any trading scenario.
I've posted a couple of analyses recently regarding this pair, and one of them turned out to be an opportunity that would have been a loss. It's just as important to know when to exit your trade as it is to know when to enter them. A lot of the publications that I make here are almost certainly geared towards levels to pay attention to for entering, so this is an example of how we use the same trading method to determine that we should absolutely no longer be in a specific trade.
Refer to my previous GBPCAD Analyses below for reference.
If you've done your due diligence as a trader and have properly identified a level you think the market is adhering to, when that level is broken, it should maintain the reactionary characteristic. There are many fundamental and technical ways to describe the reasons why, I won't get into that here, but I'll presume that you've heard that old support becomes new resistance and vice versa.
Case Study: Knowing when to close a losing trade.
Last week after a confirmed break on the daily chart the GBPCAD was gearing up for a move lower but first we were looking for price to come back to the support/resistance level that was broken to indeed confirm that a break had occurred. The pair began to sharply rise late last week which was expected for us to get into a short...however when the pair began to reach the key technical level it did not stop. Illustrated above you can see a reactionary zone where price was expected to stop on the 1 hour time frame...no such stop happened. This failed retest is visible on the 4 hour and Daily charts as well.
The Expected Reactionary Zone is taking the trend line that you identified and the high (or low depending on direction of trade) of the candle that confirmed the break of your key technical level.
Here is a daily chart of the same trade output:
In this daily chart you can see the same trade, the confirmed break followed immediately by a candle that does not retest. Many of you may have noticed for my trades that I tend to use larger time frames yet many of the moves that are identified happen largely on the smaller time frames as well. The core reasoning behind using higher time frames is it essentially acts as a filter. For those that trade news, and rumors, and reports....these can have a tremendous impact on a 15 minute candle...but to a daily or weekly candle...it's part of the bigger picture. As long as we account for the flexibility of the rumor volatility we are able to rely on candle closes as a key identifier in our trade decisions.
Traders need to account for market reactions in their strategies because if it was as simple as old support = new resistance, we would be able to predict highs and lows with 100% accuracy. That flexibility has a limit, and that limit is when the daily/weekly candle closes.
The way this is used to a trader's advantage is to help in removing the emotions from a trade decision. Do not marry yourself to your own ideas, traders need to stay agile, and adapt to market condition's as they change. If the market gives you relevant info that nullifies the analysis it cannot be ignored.
If the Daily Candle closes above (or below depending on trade direction) an identified key technical level after a confirmed break, the retest of that level is considered null and void, any trade taken in anticipation of that retest should be closed immediately. Furthermore, that identified key technical level is now considered invalid and should be removed from the picture as it is no longer controlling market conditions.
Thanks everyone for reading and I hope this helps in some manner. If you enjoy what I have to offer, feel free to comment, follow or "like"
Follow the clues "Education on price action only"Clues are piece of information/evidence/facts that helps investigators to discover/solve sequence of an event. In this case, these clues are used to identify the sequence of price action/trend. These clues also can be used as signals to confirm price action direction or even a sequence of multiple trends.
Left upper corner there are 3 clues that is informing us that price action is breaking downwards.
First clue is that price action broke and is forming below the minor support line/zone. It is considered minor support, because there only 2 touches and usually in lower time frames the support or resistance zones are very weak.
Second clue indicates price action made lower low. These lower lows inform that price action is moving downwards. Third clue is the higher low is also informing that price action is heading downwards.
In the chart there is red line/zone that is the resistance, the more touches of the higher low touches the stronger it will become. This resistance can be used to place stop loss above it, not on it or well trader will get stop out every time price action hits it. The higher lows also can be used as stop loss zones as stated in the chart. If downtrend continues, just move the stop loss to the next following higher low.
The pink line is the support zone which has multiple touches of the lower lows. As seen in the chart the price action is bouncing between support and resistance line/zone forming downward channel pattern. At the bottom of the chart price action breaks the resistance/channel indicating the rend is about to reverse.