Use long term charts to decide trends or range bound markets. Begin
a chart analysis with daily, weekly and even monthly charts spanning several
years if possible. A larger scale chart essentially shows the life of the market
and provides clearer visibility and a better long-term perspective on a market.
Once the long-term has been established, consult daily and intra-day charts,
these charts can include anything from say 10 minute to daily charts. A
short-term market view alone can often be deceptive. Even if you only trade the
very short term, you will do better if you're trading in the same direction as
the intermediate and longer-term trends. If there is no trend then a different
strategy is necessary, possibly playing the range until the market begins to
trend once more.
As can be seen in the 1-hour EUR/USD candle chart below there has
been an uptrend with three peaks and three troughs. Long entry positions would
at 1.2700, 1.2760 and 1.2800.
past results are not necessarily indicative of future results and
the examples are not representative of all customer accounts.
If you determine the trend, then follow it. Market trends come in a
variety of terms - long-term, intermediate-term and short-term. The first thing
you have to determine is what type of a trader are you, long term or day trader,
that decision will determine which charts you should be using. For instance, if
you"re day trading, use the daily and intra-day charts, but always use the
longer-range chart to determine the trend, and then use the shorter-term chart
for timing. Make sure you trade in the direction of that trend and then buy on
dips if the trend is up and sell on rallies if the trend is down.
Find the support and resistance levels. As above when you want to
buy an instrument, its best to buy near support levels. The support is usually a
previous reaction low. Using the same logic, the best place to sell an
instrument would be near its resistance levels. The resistance level is usually
a previous peak. After a resistance peak has been broken, it will usually
provide support on subsequent pullbacks. In other words, the old high becomes
the new low. In the same way, when a support level has been broken, it will
usually produce selling on subsequent rallies - the old low can then become the
new high.
Measure retracements in percentage terms. Market corrections up or
down often retrace a significant portion of the previous trend. One can measure
the corrections in an existing trend in simple percentages. A fifty percent
retracement of a prior trend is most common. A minimum retracement is usually
one-third of the prior trend. The maximum retracement is usually two-thirds.
Fibonacci retracements of 38% and 62% are also worth watching. Therefore popular
buy points in an uptrend are usually between 33-38% retracement of the original
trend.
As can be seen from the chart below, when joining the trough at
1.2750 to the peak at 1.2890 in the 1-hour EUR/USD chart we can see the
Fibonacci levels drawn out. The first retracement ended at the 38% line and the
major retracement at the 62% line.
past results are not necessarily indicative of future results and
the examples are not representative of all customer accounts.
5. Trend Lines
One of the simplest and most effective charting tools are trend
lines use them. Draw a straight line that join two points on the chart. Up trend
lines are drawn along two successive lows and down trend lines are drawn along
two successive peaks. Prices will often pull back to trend lines before resuming
their trend. The breaking of trend lines often signals a change in a trend. The
longer a trend line has been in effect, and the more times it has been tested,
the more significant it becomes; a trend line becomes valid if it is touched at
least three times.
Moving averages often provide objective buy and sell signals, hence
they should be watched. They show you if an existing trend is still in motion
and help confirm a trend change. Do not rely on moving averages to tell you in
advance if there is a trend change imminent; use it as a back-up to your chart
analysis for trend identification. A combination chart of two moving averages is
the most popular way of finding trading signals. Signals are given when the
shorter average line crosses the longer. Price crossings above and below a
40-day and 200-day moving average also provide good trading signals. Since
moving average chart lines are trend-following indicators, they work best in a
trending market.
As can be seen in the EUR/USD 1-hour chart below the 5-period and
25-period moving averages project and confirm the trend in progress. The
5-period moving average crosses over the slower 25-period moving average at
1.2715 confirming the up-trend with an exit point at 1.2770. The same rate
1.2770 is another indication of a resume in the up-trend with an exit at
1.2850.
past results are not necessarily indicative of future results and
the examples are not representative of all customer forex trading accounts.
Oscillators help identify overbought and oversold markets. While
moving averages offer confirmation of a trending market, oscillators can often
warn us in advance that a market has rallied or fallen too far and will soon
turn or retrace. Two of the most popular oscillators are the Relative Strength
Index or RSI and the Stochastics. Both these oscillators work on a scale of 0 to
100. With the RSI, readings over 70 are overbought while readings below 30 are
oversold. The overbought and oversold values for Stochastics are 80 and 20.
Oscillator divergences often warn of market turns and as opposed to moving
averages they work best in range bound markets. Weekly signals can be used as
filters on daily signals. Daily signals can be used as filters for intra-day
charts.
As can be seen in the EUR/USD 1-hour chart below, the Stochastics
break through the 80-20 barriers and cross over themselves on corrections of the
price. This occurs several times.
past results are not necessarily indicative of future results
and the examples are not representative of all customer accounts.
The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator combines
a moving average crossover system with the overbought/oversold elements of an
oscillator. A buy signal occurs when the faster line crosses above the slower
and both lines are below zero. A sell signal takes place when the faster line
crosses below the slower from above the zero line. Longer-period signals take
precedence over shorter-period signals. The MACD histogram plots the difference
between the two lines and gives even earlier warnings of trend changes. It"s
called a histogram because vertical bars are used to show the difference between
the two lines on the chart.
As can be seen in the EUR/USD 1-hour chart below, the MACD
indicators cross over one another beneath the zero line to show a buy signal and
vice versa for the sell signal. This occurs most prominently at 1.2760 to buy,
1.2870 to sell.
past results are not necessarily indicative of future results and
the examples are not representative of all customer accounts.
The Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) line helps determine
whether a market is in a trending or range bound phase. It measures the degree
of trend or direction in the market. A rising ADX line suggests the presence of
a strong trend. A falling ADX line suggests the presence of a trading market and
the absence of a trend. A rising ADX line favors moving averages; a falling ADX
favors oscillators. By plotting the direction of the ADX line, the trader is
able to determine which trading style and which
set of indicators are most suitable for the current market environment.
Technical analysis is a skill that improves with experience and
study. The more you learn and practice the better you'll be, keep studying, fine
tune methods, learn what works for you and what doesn't and remain technical and
not emotional.