Many technical trading strategies revolve around the assumption that markets
will hover within a given range — and with good reason.
Seventy percent of the time markets will bounce back and forth between support and resistance levels, or fluctuate randomly. The rest of the time, market behavior is characterized
by persistent price moves — trends — that shatter support and resistance levels.
Although these basic probabilities work against traders who try to exploit trends, the potential rewards can be worth the risk. It is possible to increase your ability to capitalize on
t rends by locating trend signals, identifying specific entry points within the trend and using risk management techniques to limit losses.
The following sections will explain how a trading system based on these concepts works especially well in the foreign exchange (Forex), or currency, market, particularly
with the “major” currencies — the U.S. dollar, Euro, Japanese yen, British pound, Swiss franc,
Canadian dollar and Australian dollar.
More than 85 percent of transactions in the $1 trillion per day Forex refresher,” right).
Step 1: Identify a trend. Compare the moving averages on the 10-minute and hourly charts. A trend is in effect when price is consistently above/below the moving averages on both charts.
Step 2: Pinpoint entry. Once you’ve identified a trend, look for the following two conditions at the same time on the 10-minute chart: 1) the market is no more than 20 points above (to buy) or 20
points below (to sell) the moving average; and 2) the fast stochastic line crosses above the slow stochastic line below 20 (to buy) or crosses below the slow stochastic line above 80 (to sell).
These conditions indicate: 1) the currency is currently in a short-term uptrend or downtrend; and 2) the currency has paused or pulled back (reflected by the higher low stochastic reading
and the fact that price is within 20 points of the moving average) and is poised to turn (because the fast stochastic line is crossing back above or below the slow line).
Step 3: Ride the trend. Set a trailing stop after the initial trade entry. On a long position, enter a stop-loss order 10 points below the 200-period moving average on the 10-minute chart. In the
case of a short position, place the initial stop 10 points above this moving average.
As the trade goes in your favor, raise (for a long trade) or lower (for a short trade) the stop to protect profits. For simplicity’s sake, the following examples use a trailing stop 25 points from
each new top or bottom. The charts in the next section illustrate the application of this strategy in two currency pairs.

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1 comments:

Hey Everyone,

"Which Forex pair and time frame is best to trade" is the frequently asked question and I want do give you the EXPLICIT ANSWER in this comment.

Are you expecting that I am going to say something like EUR/USD on 5-minute time frame or GBP/USD on weekly...? No, it is not so simple, but SIMPLE ENOUGH we can figure it out!

The "DIFFICULTY" is that markets change over time. If GBP/USD was a well trending currency pair a few years ago, today it is another one.

I actually want to let you know about a SPECIAL TOOL that I use to find the BEST TRENDING PAIRS among all the Forex pairs.

CHECK IT OUT: ForexTrendy

The instrument inspects 34 Forex pairs on all time frames from minute to monthly. This way you pick the best trending pair and time frame at the current time.

LINK FOR SOFTWARE: ForexTrendy

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